Polymer Bulletin, Vol.71, No.5, 1241-1262, 2014
Influence of rubber on the curing kinetics of DGEBA epoxy and the effect on the morphology and hardness of the composites
The influence of the end groups of two liquid rubbers on curing kinetics, morphology, and hardness behavior of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A based epoxy resin (DGEBA) has been studied. The rubbers are silyl-dihydroxy terminated (PDMS-co-DPS-OH) and silyl-diglycidyl ether terminated (PDMS-DGE). Crosslinking reactions, investigated by shear rheometry, ranged 90-110 A degrees C, using a constant concentration (5 phr) of liquid rubbers and 1,2-Diamino cyclohexane (1,2-DCH) as hardener agent. The gel time, t (gel), of the neat epoxy significantly decreased when adding the elastomers, more so for the silyl-dihydroxy terminated elastomer; at 110 A degrees C the reaction was nearly complete before rheological test started. The results suggest that the elastomers induced a catalytic effect on the curing reaction. Scanning electron microscopy revealed phase separation of the elastomer during the curing reaction with rubber domains about 5 mu m size. However, the DGEBA/dihydroxy terminated elastomer composite cured at 110 A degrees C exhibited a homogenous morphology, that is, the rapid reaction time would not allow for phase separation. Water contact angle tests evidenced either more hydrophilic (silyl-diglycidyl ether terminated rubber) or more hydrophobic (silyl-dihydroxy terminated rubber) behavior than the neat epoxy. The latter effect is attributed to the presence of aromatic rings in the backbone structure of PDMS-co-DPS-OH. Microindentation measurements show that the elastomers significantly reduced the hardness of the epoxy resin, the DGEBA/ether terminated composite exhibiting the lowest hardness values. Moreover, hardness increased as reaction temperature did, correlating with a reduction of microdomains size thus enabling the tuning of mechanical properties with reaction temperature.