화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.81, No.4, 889-900, 2001
Curing of epoxy-urethane copolymers in a heated mold: Effect of the curing conditions on the phase-separation process
The curing process of an epoxy-urethane copolymer in a heated mold was studied. The epoxy resin (DGEBA, Araldyt GY9527; Ciba Geigy), was coreacted with a urethane prepolymer (PU, Desmocap 12; Bayer) through an amine that acted as crosslinking agent (mixture of cycloaliphatic amines; Distraltec). The study focused on the effect of the curing condition and PU concentration on time-temperature profiles measured in the mold and the consequent final morphologies obtained. As the PU concentration increases, the maximum temperature reached in the mold decreases as a result of the dilution effect of the elastomer on reaction heat, whereas the T, of the piece also decreases. Phase separation is a function of conversion and temperature reached in the curing part and was analyzed using experimental data and a mathematical model that predicts temperature and conversion throughout the thickness of the mold. Scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy were used to determine the characteristics of the dispersed phase for the different formulations and conditions of curing. It was shown that the size of the dispersed phase increased with the initial PU concentration, whereas there were practically no differences in the separated phase as a function of position or temperature of curing tin the range of 70 to 100 degreesC studied). The superposition of the phase diagrams with the conversion-temperature trajectories during cure provided an explanation of the morphologies generated.