Toughened Epoxy Resins - American Chemical Society

2 BFGoodrich Company, Brecksville, OH 44141-3289 ... 4Current address: Riewkim Research and Associates, 2174 Rickel Drive, Akron, OH 44333-2917...
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Toughened Epoxy Resins: Preformed Particles as Tougheners for Adhesives and Matrices C. Keith Riew,

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A. R. Siebert, R. W. Smith, M . Fernando, and A. J. Kinloch 2

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Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Akron, Akron, OH 44325-3906. B F G o o d r i c h Company, Brecksville, OH 44141-3289 Department of Mechanical Engineering, Imperial College of Science, Technology, and Medicine, Exhibition Road, London SW7 2BX, United Kingdom 1

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Free-flowing, preformed, rigid, multilayer acrylic core-shell poly­ mers with variable reactive-shell compositions were made by a se­ quential emulsion polymerization followed by spray- or freeze-dry­ ingto give powders with various particle sizes. These polymers were used to enhance the toughness of epoxy resins. The main materials studied were a blend of a solid and liquid diglycidyl ether of bisphe­ nol A (DGEBA)

epoxy resin, which was cured with 4,4'-diamino­

diphenyl sulfone (DDS) and toughened with the core-shell poly­ mers. The glass-transition temperatures of the cured epoxy materials were over 190 °C. The toughened epoxy resins were evalu­ atedas bulk materials and as adhesives. The adhesive strength mea­ suredin the peel mode was improved by up to about fourfold by the addition of the core-shell polymers, with the lap-shear strengths be­ ing relatively unaffected. A blend of Ν,Ν,Ν',N',-tetraglycidyl-4,4'­ diaminodiphenylmethane epoxy resin (TGDDM)

and liquid DGE­

BA, which was cured with DDS and toughened with the core-shell polymers, was evaluated as a matrix resin for an epoxy-graphite composite. The mode II fracture toughness, G , was enhanced from 500 J/m for the unmodified composite to 890 J/m for the toughened epoxy-matrix composite. IIc

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REFORMED PARTICLES SUCH AS THERMOPLASTIC POWDERS ΟΓ COre-shell polymers made from latexes are b e i n g increasingly used as tougheners for

Current address: Riewkim Research and Associates, 2174 Rickel Drive, Akron, OH 44333-2917. 0-8412-3151-6

© 1996 American Chemical Society

Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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T O U G H E N E D PLASTICS I I

thermosets a n d thermoplastics (J). Some o f the advantages o f toughening plastics using preformed particles rather than reactive l i q u i d rubbers are that it is relatively easy to form particles o f different sizes and to maximize the volume fraction of the toughening phase. I n general, the preformed particles enhance toughness without any tradeoff i n thermomechanical properties. T h e conventional carboxy-tenriinated poly(butadiene-acrylonitrile) ( C T B N ) type o f m o d i fier produces the greatest degree of toughness of the existing c o m m e r c i a l tougheners for the thermoset resin systems. Unfortunately, this enhancement is at the expense of (a) losses i n the thermal or load-bearing properties, and (b) a decrease o f toughness o n aging, due to unsaturation i n the backbone structure o f the rubber. R i c c o et al. (2) have reported a quantitative assessment of the effect of structural heterogeneity o f rubber particles on mechanical factors. T h e y used a micromechanical analysis o f an elementary m o d e l of a particulate-filled material, consisting o f a continuous matrix phase and a discontinuous filler phase made u p o f discrete heterogeneous particles. T h e y showed that distributions of the stress a n d strain concentrations i n the surrounding elastic matrix prod u c e d by a rubber-coated, spherical, hard particle are very similar to those p r o d u c e d b y a solid rubber particle, unless the rubbery coating on the surface o f the h a r d particle became very thin compared w i t h the total diameter o f the particle. These results provide a theoretical explanation of what has been observed i n a high-impact polystyrene having glassy polystyrene particles o c c l u d e d w i t h i n polybutadiene rubber particles i n a polystyrene matrix. Namely, a large volume fraction o f occluded glassy polystyrene may exist w i t h i n the r u b ber particle without i m p a i r i n g its toughening efficiency This observation means that a hard particle w i t h a thin rubber coating can behave like a solid rubber particle i n toughening efficiency. T h e toughening effect o f the thin film o f rubber is mainly due to energy-absorbing plastic flow i n d u c e d around such particles i n the vicinity o f the crack tip. I n order to test R i c c o et al. s analytical approaches experimentally, we designed three-layer, preformed, particulate tougheners that consist of a large plastic core (60% by weight), a thin inner elastomerie shell (20% by weight), and a thin outer plastic shell (20% b y weight), w h i c h may behave like core-shell polymers w i t h 8 0 % by weight of r u b b e r core. Two-layer polymeric particles w i t h a plastic core and a thin elastomerie shell (which may behave like 100% rubber particles), may have been better for the test program; but it w o u l d have been difficult to keep the particles separate and free-flowing. I n industry, most o f the manufacturers of c o m m e r c i a l core-shell tougheners prefer to produce higher rubbery-core contents, for example, more than 5 0 % , to have higher toughening efficiency. F o r the outer-shell compositions, the choice of a m o n o m e r alters the reactive functional group(s) o n the surface o f the particle (e.g., epoxy, carboxy, mercaptan, etc.). Such groups w i l l enable the toughener particles to compatabilize w i t h , and possibly chemically b o n d w i t h , the matrix resin. Thus for the outer shell, methyl methacrylate (M) and ethyl acrylate (E) were copolymer-

Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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Toughened Epoxy Resins

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i z e d w i t h a m i n o r amount of a m o n o m e r w i t h a reactive functional group, such as glycidyl acrylate ( M E G , where G is glycidyl acrylate), and carboxy groups i n acrylic acid ( M E A c , where A c is acrylic acid) or itaconic acid ( M A n I , where A n is acrylonitrile and I is itaconic acid). A n o t h e r outer shell was p r o d u c e d b y us­ i n g copolymers of methyl methacrylate w i t h acrylonitrile and caprolactonediol acrylate ( M A n C , where C is caprolactonediol acrylate) for better compatibility.

Experimental Details Adhesive A. One-part epoxy adhesive fonnulations are listed i n Table I. The particular tougheners evaluated all have the same composition; namely, they are three-layer, core-shell polymers with an outer shell containing polymethyl methacrylate-ethyl acrylate-acrylic acid ( M E A c ) , made by emulsion polymeriza­ tion with reactive groups. They are processed to make free-flowing powders. A l l tougheners were made by spray-drying the emulsion. The one exception was for the emulsion that produced the particle size of 5 to 45 μιη. This emulsion was co­ agulated, filtered, washed, dried, and pulverized. Particle sizes of the three M E A c tougheners were 5 to 45 μιη (T-A), 17.8 μηι (T-B), and 2.3 μηι (T-C). Adhesive formulations were mixed by hand, then cured for 1 h at 170 °C. They were then tested using cold-rolled steel and electrogalvanized steel sub­ strates according to the A S T M procedures D1002 and D1876 for lap-shear strength and T-peel resistance, respectively. Five specimens were tested i n lapshear and three i n T-peel tests. The metal coupons were 25.4 χ 101.6 χ 0.76 m m . A 12.7-mm overlap was used for lap-shear tests and a 76.2-mm bond length was used for the T-peel tests. The adhesive bond thickness was 0.48 m m and was con­ trolled using wire spacers. Adhesive B. Bulk materials and adhesive film were made with a blend of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A ( D G E B A ) epoxy resin in a solid form (epoxy equiv­ alent weight 530), 25 parts, and liquid form (epoxy equivalent weight 190), 75 parts, and were cured with 4,4'-diaminodiphenyl sulfone ( D D S , amine equivalent weight 64), 28 parts, and toughened with the core-shell polymers, 0 or 15 parts (Table II). Bulk samples were cured at 125 °C for 1 h, followed by 177 °C for 2 h, and fi­ nally 220 °C for 1 h. Fracture-toughness tests on bulk samples were performed ac­ cording to the A S T M E 3 9 9 - 8 3 procedure using compact-tension specimens with a thickness of 6.35 mm. Tensile tests were performed following A S T M D638-86. Both tests were run at a 50-mm/min jaw speed. Adhesive formulations were blend-

Table I. Adhesive A Formulation Material

Parts

D G E B A resin Tabular alumina Cab-O-Sil Dieyandiamide Omnicure 94 Core-shell toughener

100 40 3.5 6 2 0,2.5, 7.5,10, and 15

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l-phenyl-3,3-dimethylurea.

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Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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T O U G H E N E D PLASTICS II

Table II. Adhesive Β F o r m u l a t i o n Material

Parts

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D G E B A resin (epoxy equivalent weight 530) D G E B A resin (epoxy equivalent weight 190) 4,4'-diaminodiphenyl sulfone (amine equivalent weight 64) Core—shell toughener

25 75 28 0,5

ed using a three-roll ink-mill after three passes. The blend was then heated to 60-70 °C and poured onto a running release paper over a hot platen adjusted to 60-80 °C. The thickness of the resin film was adjusted by passing the film through a Gardner knife and then flanking it by a layer of nylon scrim and release polyfilm. The glass-transition temperature of the adhesives after cure was over 190 °C. A l u m i n u m panels, which had a thickness of 0.61 and 1.63 m m , were etched with chromic acid. A S T M procedure D3167-76 (reapproved 1981) was followed for 135° peel tests. The adhesive film was placed between the aluminum panels and press-laminated at a temperature of 177 °C for 1 h at a pressure of approxi­ mately 5 psi (34.5 χ 10 Pa). The temperature was then increased to 220 °C, and the joints were kept under pressure for another hour. The heaters i n the hydraulic press were then switched off and the platens air-cooled and then water-cooled u n ­ til the platen temperature was down to 100 °C. The bonded panels were cut into 12.7-mm-wide joints and tested at a rate of 20 mm/min and at a peel angle of 135°. Following A S T M D1002-72 (1983), the lap shear tests were undertaken. A l u ­ minum alloy sheets that had a thickness of 1.626 m m were bonded and press-lami­ nated as described above for the peel tests. The panels were then cut into 25.4-mm panels and tested at a rate of 5 mm/min. 3

Fiber-Composite Materials. F o r the epoxy-graphite composites, a blend of 60 parts of N,N,N^N^-tetraglycidyl-4,4'-αUaminoαlpnenylmethane epoxy resin ( T G D D M ) and 40 parts of liquid D G E B A was used as the matrix. The blend was cured with D D S at 42 parts per hundred parts of epoxy resin (phr) by weight (3). It was toughened using the Μ Ε Ac-based toughener at a 10-phr level, which had a range ot particle sizes of 5 to 45 μηι. Processing was accomplished using two i m ­ pregnation steps followed by an autoclave curing process to consolidate the final laminate, according to the procedure described by Lee et al. (4). The final multi­ layer laminate structure contained layers of matrix resin with reinforcing carbon fibers separated by thin layers of matrix resin with the particulate toughener. Mode II interlaminar fracture toughness tests were performed using the end-notch-flex­ ure specimen (5).

Results and Discussion Adhesive A. F o r the Adhesive A system, the tougheners were evaluat­ e d at levels of 0, 2.5, 7.5, 10, and 15 phr, as shown i n Table I for the M E A c based c o r e - s h e l l toughener w i t h a particle-size range of 5 to 45 μιτι (Τ-A). T h e toughener T - A showed the best improvement at a toughener level of 7.5 p h r and higher (Table III). F i g u r e 1 shows the lap-shear strength and T-peel strength o f the u n m o d i f i e d adhesive (CT), the three tougheners at the 15 p h r

Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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Toughened Epoxy Resins

Table III. T-Peel and Lap-Shear Properties of Adhesive Joints of Adhesive A Formulations at Various Levels of MEAe Toughener Toughener Level 0

2.5

7.5

10

15

Lap-shear strength on oily cold rolled steel (psi)

1160

1100

1380

1390

1440

Lap-shear strength on oily electrogalvanized steel (psi)

1180

1330

1430

1510

1460

T-peel strength on oily cold rolled steel (pli)

13.5

13.1

18.3

21.6

23.9

T-peel strength on oily electrogalvanized steel (pli)

13.5

18.6

26.4

24.9

25.5

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Test Type

NOTE: The particle-size range for the MEAc tough ener is 5-45 μιη (Τ-Α).

level (T-A, T - B , a n d T - C ) , a n d C T B N (L13). T h e figure shows the effect of particle size on the lap-shear and T-peel strengths at 15 p h r of the toughener. T h e c o r e - s h e l l polymers of T - C d i d not improve the adhesive properties at all, at any levels. It is noteworthy that the T - A toughener, w h i c h h a d the largest particle sizes, showed the best improvements i n T-peel adhesive strength. However, i n spite of the chemical reactivity o f particulate tougheners, the i m ­ provement i n toughness obtained using the core-shell tougheners is lower than that observed for the reactive l i q u i d rubber, C T B N . O n e reason for this difference is the terminal difunctionality o f C T B N , w h i c h can chain-extend a n d reduce the cross-link density of the epoxy adhesive. However, the poten­ tial advantage of saturated, particulate, core-shell tougheners is better ultravi­ olet-light a n d thermo-oxidative stability than can be obtained using C T B N . Adhesive B. T h e fracture toughness measured using compact-tension specimens and the tensile strength are shown i n Table IV. A l l the systems were c u r e d w i t h D D S , a n d the glass-transition temperatures o f all the samples were above 190 °C. I n general, it is extremely difficult to toughen such brittle epoxy resins. T h e toughness enhancement shown i n Table I V is, therefore, reason­ ably encouraging for the three different types o f particulate tougheners, con­ sidering the brittleness of the base resin. N o t e that the mode I fracture tough­ ness, the tensile fracture stress, and the failure strain are all lowered as particle size increases i n the M E A c - b a s e d tougheners. A m o n g the various types of tougheners, the M A n C - b a s e d c o r e - s h e l l p o l y m e r gave the best enhancement i n toughness. T h e caprolactone segments, along w i t h the acrylonitrile groups, most probably increased the compatibility w i t h the epoxy-matrix system. T h e carboxylic functional groups o f M E A c or M A n I should have given a better adhesion because of reactivity between the

Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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Table IV. Bulk Properties of Adhesive Β Formulations Containing 5 phr of Toughener Tensile Property Type of Outer Shell

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a

None MAnC MAnI MEAc MEAc MEAc

Particle Size (μηι)

Elongation (%)

Stress (MPa)

Modulus (GPa)

Fracture Toughness, G (J/m )

3.9 3.3 2.4 3.1 2.6 2.6

76.5 69.7 64.12 60.0 58.4 56.4

3.29 3.01 3.45 4.01 3.65 3.58

107 266 161 220 175 141

9.9 10.4 2.3 17.8 5-45

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Ic

M, methyl methaerylate; An, acrylonitrile; C, caprolactonediol acrylate; I, itaconic acid; E, ethyl acrylate; Ac, acrylic acid.

a

domains a n d matrix resin. However, they may have poorer compatibility than the M A n C - b a s e d tougheners. T h e M A n C toughener also gave the highest p e e l strength, as shown i n Table V. T h e p e e l strength was i m p r o v e d fourfold w i t h lap-shear strength being retained, compared w i t h the adhesives based o n u n ­ modified epoxy resin. Fiber-Composite Materials. Interlaminar fracture energies o f epoxy-graphite composite were measured i n mode II fracture (Table V I ) . T h e mode II fracture toughness, G , was increased from 500 J / m for the u n m o d ­ ified resin to 890 J / m for the toughened epoxy resin (3). Particle sizes o f this particular M E A c i n Table V I ranged from 5 to 4 5 μηι and averaged about 18 μηι. I n mode I fracture, the toughener particle sizes, being relatively large, may act as flaws, a n d the G values are actually lower for the c u r e d epoxy m a ­ terials toughened w i t h core-shell polymers, as shown i n Table V I . I I c

2

2

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F r a e t o g r a p h i e S t u d i e s . Visual examination o f the fracture surfaces from the various tests revealed no signs o f significant plastic deformation b u t d i d show that stress-whitening had occurred i n some o f the toughened epoxy resins. A n exception was the M E A c core-shell toughener w i t h a particle-size range o f 5 to 45 μηι. There, no signs o f stress-whitening were observed. T h e fracture surfaces were then examined using scanning electron m i ­ croscopy ( S E M ) . I n the case o f the M E A c core-shell toughener w i t h a parti-

Figure 1. Lap-shear strength (top) and T-peel strength (bottom) of one-part epoxy adhesives (Adhesive A formulations). Key: CRS, oily cold-rolled steel; EGS, electrogalvanized steel; CT, control (unmodified resin); T-A, T-B, and T-C refer to particle sizes of MEAc tougheners: 5 to 45 μιη (T-A), 17.8 am (T-B), and 2.3 am (T-C); and L13, Hycar CTBN (1300x13).

Riew and Kinloch; Toughened Plastics II Advances in Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1996.

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Table V. Peel and Lap-Shear Properties of Adhesive Joints of Adhesive Β Formulations Containing 15 phr of Toughener

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Type of Outer Shell None MAnC MEAe MEAc MEAc MAnI

Particle Size (μηι) 9.9 2.3 17.8 .5-45.0 10.4

135° Peel Strength (lb/in.)

Lap-Shear Strength (psi)

1.9 6.8 2.5 1.8 3.0 2.1

2,300 2,030 1,600 2,180 1,740 1,600

NOTE: An aluminum-alloy substrate was used.

cle-size range o f 5 to 45 μιη, good adhesion was found between irregularly shaped particles and the epoxy resin. (Recall that the irregularly shaped parti­ cles arise from the pulverization process used to form this type o f toughener.) Fractographic features associated with crack-pinning were also discernible (Figure 2). Such fractures are normally observed w h e n inorganic particles are added to a brittle matrix (6, 7). Thus, for these materials some increase i n toughness appears to arise from a crack-tip p i n n i n g mechanism. S E M studies o f the toughened formulations based o n core-shell poly­ mers that were spherical i n shape revealed the presence o f debonding around the particles. T h e greater the toughness o f the formulation, the more extensive the debonding, a n d a more intense stress-whitening o f the fracture surfaces was also seen visually. T h e S E M images are shown i n Figures 3 and 4. E s p e ­ cially i n F i g u r e 4 (bottom), the debonding and associated plastic dilatation o f the epoxy resin may be clearly seen. T h e parabolic, or clam-shaped, features i n Figures 3 and 4 (top) have been previously seen (