Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks

One of the major classes of polymer matrix resins under consideration for structural composite applications in the infrastructure and construction industries is the dimethacrylate matrix resin. An investigation of the relationships between the chemical structures and properties of these dimethacryla...

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Main Author: Burts, Ellen
Other Authors: Chemistry
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29507
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11092000-18580048/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-295072021-10-07T05:27:44Z Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks Burts, Ellen Chemistry Riffle, Judy S. Wightman, James P. Lesko, John J. McGrath, James E. Hale, Arturo dimethacrylate vinyl ester network crosslink One of the major classes of polymer matrix resins under consideration for structural composite applications in the infrastructure and construction industries is the dimethacrylate matrix resin. An investigation of the relationships between the chemical structures and properties of these dimethacrylate/styrene networks has been conducted. Oligomer number average molecular weights of the polyhydroxyether ranging from 700 to 1200g/mole were studied with systematically varied styrene concentrations to assess the effects of crosslink density and chemical composition on glass transition temperatures, toughness, tensile properties and matrix strain. Network densities have been estimated from measurements of the rubbery moduli at Tg + 40°C. Within this rather small range in vinyl ester molecular weight, toughness of the resultant networks improved tremendously as the vinyl ester oligomer Mn was increased from 700g/mole to 1200g/mole due to improvements in the resistance to crack propagation. As styrene concentration was increased along all series' of materials, brittleness increased even though the molecular weight between crosslinks increased. This was attributed to the inherent relative brittleness of the polystyrene chemical structure relative to the polyhydroxyether component. This may also be related to the reactivity ratios dictating styrene and vinyl ester sequence length and warrants further investigation. As expected, the volume contraction upon cure also decreased significantly as styrene was decreased, and thus residual cure stresses may be reduced in fiber-reinforced composites. Vickers microhardness values decreased for each of the series when molecular weight increased and styrene content decreased. Two different cure procedures were compared to assess the effects of conversion on the physical and mechanical properties. All mechanical properties investigated (i.e. fracture toughness, tensile strength, and microhardness) were dependent on the cure procedure. Materials cured at 140°C were harder, more brittle, had lower elongations and higher rubbery moduli than those cured at 25°C followed by a 93°C postcure. A maximum in the degree of conversion occurred with increasing polymerization temperature and can be explained by the competition between the chemical reaction and molecular mobility. The overall shrinkage per moles of vinyl groups converted was the same when the materials were cured at 25°C or 140°C. However, in the room temperature cured samples, there was essentially no further densification of the network during postcure, regardless of the postcure temperature. A mono-methacrylate analogue of the dimethacrylate terminated poly(hydroxyether) oligomer was synthesized and copolymerized with styrene to study the effects of chain transfer during elevated temperature reactions. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:18:21Z 2014-03-14T20:18:21Z 2000-10-26 2000-11-09 2001-12-04 2000-12-04 Dissertation etd-11092000-18580048 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29507 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11092000-18580048/ Burtsdiss.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic dimethacrylate
vinyl ester
network
crosslink
spellingShingle dimethacrylate
vinyl ester
network
crosslink
Burts, Ellen
Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
description One of the major classes of polymer matrix resins under consideration for structural composite applications in the infrastructure and construction industries is the dimethacrylate matrix resin. An investigation of the relationships between the chemical structures and properties of these dimethacrylate/styrene networks has been conducted. Oligomer number average molecular weights of the polyhydroxyether ranging from 700 to 1200g/mole were studied with systematically varied styrene concentrations to assess the effects of crosslink density and chemical composition on glass transition temperatures, toughness, tensile properties and matrix strain. Network densities have been estimated from measurements of the rubbery moduli at Tg + 40°C. Within this rather small range in vinyl ester molecular weight, toughness of the resultant networks improved tremendously as the vinyl ester oligomer Mn was increased from 700g/mole to 1200g/mole due to improvements in the resistance to crack propagation. As styrene concentration was increased along all series' of materials, brittleness increased even though the molecular weight between crosslinks increased. This was attributed to the inherent relative brittleness of the polystyrene chemical structure relative to the polyhydroxyether component. This may also be related to the reactivity ratios dictating styrene and vinyl ester sequence length and warrants further investigation. As expected, the volume contraction upon cure also decreased significantly as styrene was decreased, and thus residual cure stresses may be reduced in fiber-reinforced composites. Vickers microhardness values decreased for each of the series when molecular weight increased and styrene content decreased. Two different cure procedures were compared to assess the effects of conversion on the physical and mechanical properties. All mechanical properties investigated (i.e. fracture toughness, tensile strength, and microhardness) were dependent on the cure procedure. Materials cured at 140°C were harder, more brittle, had lower elongations and higher rubbery moduli than those cured at 25°C followed by a 93°C postcure. A maximum in the degree of conversion occurred with increasing polymerization temperature and can be explained by the competition between the chemical reaction and molecular mobility. The overall shrinkage per moles of vinyl groups converted was the same when the materials were cured at 25°C or 140°C. However, in the room temperature cured samples, there was essentially no further densification of the network during postcure, regardless of the postcure temperature. A mono-methacrylate analogue of the dimethacrylate terminated poly(hydroxyether) oligomer was synthesized and copolymerized with styrene to study the effects of chain transfer during elevated temperature reactions. === Ph. D.
author2 Chemistry
author_facet Chemistry
Burts, Ellen
author Burts, Ellen
author_sort Burts, Ellen
title Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
title_short Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
title_full Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
title_fullStr Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
title_full_unstemmed Structure and Properties Of dimethacrylate-Styrene Resins and Networks
title_sort structure and properties of dimethacrylate-styrene resins and networks
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29507
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11092000-18580048/
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