Polymer, Vol.44, No.5, 1391-1399, 2003
Polyimide/montmorillonite nanocomposites based on thermally stable, rigid-rod aromatic amine modifiers
The preparation and processing of most of polymer/clay nanocomposites need high temperature. This limited the application of commonly used organic modifiers of long carbon-chain alkyl ammonium salts because of their low thermal stability. In this study, we synthesized two novel thermally stable, rigid-rod aromatic amines. Montmorillonite (MMT) treated by these amines exhibited larger layer-to-layer spacing, higher thermal stability than that treated by commonly used 1-hexadecylamine and also high ion-exchange ratio (> 95%). They were applied to prepare nanocomposites with polyimide (PI) by in situ polymerization. XRD, TEM were used to obtain the information on morphological structure of PI/MMT nanocomposites. DMA, TGA, DSC, universal tester were applied to characterize the mechanical and thermal properties of the nanocomposites. When the MMT content was below 3 wt%, the PI/MMT nanocomposites were strengthened and toughened at the same time. The introduction of a small amount of MMT also led to improvement in thermal stability, slight increase in glass transition temperature, marked decrease in coefficient of thermal expansion and decrease in solvent uptake. MMT treated by these aromatic amines exhibited better dispersibility and (probably) interfacial interaction with PI matrix than that treated by 1-hexadecylamine. The nanocomposites based on these MMT resultantly exhibited better mechanical, thermal and solvent resistance properties than those based on 1-hexadecylamine treated MMT. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.