Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC

In this research, the curing degree of an acrylate-based monomer using direct UV-assisted writing technology was characterized by differential photo calorimetry (Photo-DSC) to investigate the curing behavior. Triggered by the UV light, the duo function group monomer 1,6-Hexamethylene diacrylate (HDD...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fengze Jiang, Dietmar Drummer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-05-01
Series:Polymers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1080
id doaj-e0b6324dfb784abb9ce39f5a584d39c5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e0b6324dfb784abb9ce39f5a584d39c52020-11-25T02:14:04ZengMDPI AGPolymers2073-43602020-05-01121080108010.3390/polym12051080Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSCFengze Jiang0Dietmar Drummer1Institute of Polymer Technology (LKT), Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Am Weichselgarten 9, 91058 Erlangen, GermanyInstitute of Polymer Technology (LKT), Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Am Weichselgarten 9, 91058 Erlangen, GermanyIn this research, the curing degree of an acrylate-based monomer using direct UV-assisted writing technology was characterized by differential photo calorimetry (Photo-DSC) to investigate the curing behavior. Triggered by the UV light, the duo function group monomer 1,6-Hexamethylene diacrylate (HDDA), photoinitiator 1173 and photoinhibitor exhibit a fast curing process. The exothermal photopolymerization reaction was performed in the isothermal mode in order to evaluate the different thermal effects that occurred during the photopolymerization process. The influences of both UV light intensity and exposure time were studied with single-factor analysis. The results obtained by photo-DSC also allow us to perform the kinetic study of the polymerization process: The results show that, for the reaction, the higher the UV intensity, the higher the curing degree together with faster curing speed. At the same time, the effect of the heat released during the exothermic reaction is negligible for the polymerization process. When increasing the exposure time, limited improvement of curing degree was shown, and the distribution is between 65–75%. The reaction enthalpy and related curing degree work as a function of time. The Avrami theory of phase change was introduced to describe the experimental data. The functions of a curing degree with light intensity and exposure time were achieved, respectively.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1080UV curingcuring kineticphoto-DSCphotopolymerizationadditive manufacturing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fengze Jiang
Dietmar Drummer
spellingShingle Fengze Jiang
Dietmar Drummer
Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
Polymers
UV curing
curing kinetic
photo-DSC
photopolymerization
additive manufacturing
author_facet Fengze Jiang
Dietmar Drummer
author_sort Fengze Jiang
title Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
title_short Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
title_full Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
title_fullStr Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
title_full_unstemmed Curing Kinetic Analysis of Acrylate Photopolymer for Additive Manufacturing by Photo-DSC
title_sort curing kinetic analysis of acrylate photopolymer for additive manufacturing by photo-dsc
publisher MDPI AG
series Polymers
issn 2073-4360
publishDate 2020-05-01
description In this research, the curing degree of an acrylate-based monomer using direct UV-assisted writing technology was characterized by differential photo calorimetry (Photo-DSC) to investigate the curing behavior. Triggered by the UV light, the duo function group monomer 1,6-Hexamethylene diacrylate (HDDA), photoinitiator 1173 and photoinhibitor exhibit a fast curing process. The exothermal photopolymerization reaction was performed in the isothermal mode in order to evaluate the different thermal effects that occurred during the photopolymerization process. The influences of both UV light intensity and exposure time were studied with single-factor analysis. The results obtained by photo-DSC also allow us to perform the kinetic study of the polymerization process: The results show that, for the reaction, the higher the UV intensity, the higher the curing degree together with faster curing speed. At the same time, the effect of the heat released during the exothermic reaction is negligible for the polymerization process. When increasing the exposure time, limited improvement of curing degree was shown, and the distribution is between 65–75%. The reaction enthalpy and related curing degree work as a function of time. The Avrami theory of phase change was introduced to describe the experimental data. The functions of a curing degree with light intensity and exposure time were achieved, respectively.
topic UV curing
curing kinetic
photo-DSC
photopolymerization
additive manufacturing
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/12/5/1080
work_keys_str_mv AT fengzejiang curingkineticanalysisofacrylatephotopolymerforadditivemanufacturingbyphotodsc
AT dietmardrummer curingkineticanalysisofacrylatephotopolymerforadditivemanufacturingbyphotodsc
_version_ 1724902176782811136