Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient

Thermosetting polymers can cure at a gradient of cure temperatures due to a variety of factors, including heat transfer in the thermoset during heating and the exotherm due to the chemical reaction occurring during the cure. A new method for assessing the effect of cure conditions on mechanical beh...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Porter, David Scott
Other Authors: Chemistry
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27874
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-100831/
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record_format oai_dc
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sources NDLTD
topic Gradient Materials
Thermoset
Toughening Polycyanurates
Phase Separation
Relaxation
Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
Polymers
Polymer Solutions
Mixing Thermodynamics
spellingShingle Gradient Materials
Thermoset
Toughening Polycyanurates
Phase Separation
Relaxation
Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
Polymers
Polymer Solutions
Mixing Thermodynamics
Porter, David Scott
Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
description Thermosetting polymers can cure at a gradient of cure temperatures due to a variety of factors, including heat transfer in the thermoset during heating and the exotherm due to the chemical reaction occurring during the cure. A new method for assessing the effect of cure conditions on mechanical behavior of toughened thermosets has been developed. Modeling of the phase separation process of a model thermoset system provided detailed understanding of the mechanism of property variation with cure temperature for this material. Subsequent characterization of gradient temperature cured samples has shown important variations, illustrating not only the importance of cure conditions, but the possibility of producing materials with new and useful properties. A special mold was developed to cure samples in a controlled gradient of temperature. Example systems known to show pronounced variations in microstructure cured in this gradient mold showed large variations of microstructure as a function of position within the sample, corresponding to the cure temperature at that point. A model toughened thermoset system was developed to demonstrate gradients of properties following cure in the gradient temperature mold. Cyanate ester materials were modified with hydroxyl-terminated butadiene-acrylonitrile copolymers as well as low Tg amorphous polyesters. The polyesters showed very desirable properties for a toughener, including relatively good thermo-oxidative stability in comparison with the butadiene-acrylonitrile toughener. However, the variation of properties of the cured materials with temperature was small, and to better understand the property variation possible using a gradient cure temperature technique, the butadiene-acrylonitrile toughened cyanate ester system was chosen for further study. This system showed a significant variation of glass transition temperature of the cyanate-rich phase as a function of cure temperature. Modeling of the phase separation process of this material was varied out employing a modeling procedure developed for epoxy materials. Various characteristics of the system were determined in order to apply the model to the chosen toughened thermoset. These included viscosity, surface, and thermodynamic parameters in addition to a careful characterization of the morphological parameters developed during cure at the chosen temperatures. Results show excellent predictive capability of the model for microstructure. Prediction of phase composition as a function of cure temperature is also possible, again with good agreement with experiment results. Higher cure temperatures result in a non-equilibrium phase composition, depressing the glass transition temperature of the continuous cyanate ester rich phase. This provides a mechanism by which properties of the system change as a function of position within a gradient temperature cured sample. Dynamic mechanical analysis was employed to characterize the relaxation properties of gradient and isothermally cured samples. The Havriliak Negami equation was chosen to describe the relaxation behavior of these samples. Comparison of the fitting of isotherms over the small, experimentally accessible range of frequencies showed that the use of time-temperature superpositioning could more reliably discern relatively small differences. The breadth of the relaxation corresponding to the glass transition of the polycyanurate phase was increased with a gradient cure temperature relative to isothermally cured samples. This increased broadness was expressed in an alternative way through the use of an autocorrelation function, which allows direct comparison of the time-dependent transition from a fully unrelaxed condition to a fully relaxed one. === Ph. D.
author2 Chemistry
author_facet Chemistry
Porter, David Scott
author Porter, David Scott
author_sort Porter, David Scott
title Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
title_short Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
title_full Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
title_fullStr Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
title_full_unstemmed Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient
title_sort production of functionally gradient materials using model thermosetting systems cured in a thermal gradient
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27874
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-100831/
work_keys_str_mv AT porterdavidscott productionoffunctionallygradientmaterialsusingmodelthermosettingsystemscuredinathermalgradient
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-278742020-09-26T05:33:59Z Production of Functionally Gradient Materials Using Model Thermosetting Systems Cured in a Thermal Gradient Porter, David Scott Chemistry Ward, Thomas C. Wightman, James P. McGrath, James E. Marand, Hervé L. Lesko, John J. Gradient Materials Thermoset Toughening Polycyanurates Phase Separation Relaxation Dynamic Mechanical Analysis Polymers Polymer Solutions Mixing Thermodynamics Thermosetting polymers can cure at a gradient of cure temperatures due to a variety of factors, including heat transfer in the thermoset during heating and the exotherm due to the chemical reaction occurring during the cure. A new method for assessing the effect of cure conditions on mechanical behavior of toughened thermosets has been developed. Modeling of the phase separation process of a model thermoset system provided detailed understanding of the mechanism of property variation with cure temperature for this material. Subsequent characterization of gradient temperature cured samples has shown important variations, illustrating not only the importance of cure conditions, but the possibility of producing materials with new and useful properties. A special mold was developed to cure samples in a controlled gradient of temperature. Example systems known to show pronounced variations in microstructure cured in this gradient mold showed large variations of microstructure as a function of position within the sample, corresponding to the cure temperature at that point. A model toughened thermoset system was developed to demonstrate gradients of properties following cure in the gradient temperature mold. Cyanate ester materials were modified with hydroxyl-terminated butadiene-acrylonitrile copolymers as well as low Tg amorphous polyesters. The polyesters showed very desirable properties for a toughener, including relatively good thermo-oxidative stability in comparison with the butadiene-acrylonitrile toughener. However, the variation of properties of the cured materials with temperature was small, and to better understand the property variation possible using a gradient cure temperature technique, the butadiene-acrylonitrile toughened cyanate ester system was chosen for further study. This system showed a significant variation of glass transition temperature of the cyanate-rich phase as a function of cure temperature. Modeling of the phase separation process of this material was varied out employing a modeling procedure developed for epoxy materials. Various characteristics of the system were determined in order to apply the model to the chosen toughened thermoset. These included viscosity, surface, and thermodynamic parameters in addition to a careful characterization of the morphological parameters developed during cure at the chosen temperatures. Results show excellent predictive capability of the model for microstructure. Prediction of phase composition as a function of cure temperature is also possible, again with good agreement with experiment results. Higher cure temperatures result in a non-equilibrium phase composition, depressing the glass transition temperature of the continuous cyanate ester rich phase. This provides a mechanism by which properties of the system change as a function of position within a gradient temperature cured sample. Dynamic mechanical analysis was employed to characterize the relaxation properties of gradient and isothermally cured samples. The Havriliak Negami equation was chosen to describe the relaxation behavior of these samples. Comparison of the fitting of isotherms over the small, experimentally accessible range of frequencies showed that the use of time-temperature superpositioning could more reliably discern relatively small differences. The breadth of the relaxation corresponding to the glass transition of the polycyanurate phase was increased with a gradient cure temperature relative to isothermally cured samples. This increased broadness was expressed in an alternative way through the use of an autocorrelation function, which allows direct comparison of the time-dependent transition from a fully unrelaxed condition to a fully relaxed one. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:12:32Z 2014-03-14T20:12:32Z 2005-04-19 2005-05-24 2008-06-24 2005-06-24 Dissertation etd-05242005-100831 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27874 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05242005-100831/ dissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech