| Literature DB >> 25608041 |
Xuetao Shi1, Guangcheng Zhang2, Thanh Vu Phuong3, Andrea Lazzeri4.
Abstract
The synergistic effect of nucleating agents and plasticizers on the thermal and mechanical performance of PLA nanocomposites was investigated with the objective of increasing the crystallinity and balancing the stiffness and toughness of PLA mechanical properties. Calcium carbonate, halloysite nanotubes, talc and LAK (sulfates) were compared with each other as heterogeneous nucleating agents. Both the DSC isothermal and non-isothermal studies indicated that talc and LAK were the more effective nucleating agents among the selected fillers. Poly(D-lactic acid) (PDLA) acted also as a nucleating agent due to the formation of the PLA stereocomplex. The half crystallization time was reduced by the addition of talc to about 2 min from 37.5 min of pure PLA by the isothermal crystallization study. The dynamic mechanical thermal study (DMTA) indicated that nanofillers acted as both reinforcement fillers and nucleating agents in relation to the higher storage modulus. The plasticized PLA studied by DMTA indicated a decreasing glass transition temperature with the increasing of the PEG content. The addition of nanofiller increased the Young's modulus. PEG had the plasticization effect of increasing the break deformation, while sharply decreasing the stiffness and strength of PLA. The synergistic effect of nanofillers and plasticizer achieved the balance between stiffness and toughness with well-controlled crystallization.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25608041 PMCID: PMC6272527 DOI: 10.3390/molecules20011579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Isothermal crystallization study of PLA2 binary composites with different fillers. (PCC: precipitated calcium carbonate; HNT:halloysite nanotubes; LAK: sulfates).
Comparison of the isothermal parameters of PLA 2002D binary composites with different fillers.
| Sample Code | ∆Hc (J/g) | Xc (%) | n | log( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA2002D | / | / | 2.45 | −4.03 | |
| PLA2/PCC | 29.14 | 31.3 | 2.56 | −4.23 | |
| PLA2/HNT | 28.58 | 30.7 | 2.44 | −3.79 | |
| PLA2/talc | 29.50 | 31.7 | 2.05 | −0.81 | |
| PLA2/LAK | 25.43 | 27.3 | 2.04 | −0.89 |
Notes: symbol “/” means no value for ∆Hc and Xc.
Figure 2DSC traces of the heating-cooling cycle for PLA molded composites. (Exo means exothermal direction).
Figure 3DSC traces (heating-cooling-reheating) of PLA 4032D composites.
Figure 4Temperature dependence of the storage modulus and Tanδ of selected PLA2 composites.
Figure 5Temperature dependence of the storage modulus and tanδ of PLA4 binary composites with PEG.
Figure 6Temperature dependence of the storage modulus and tanδ of PLA4 binary composites with Poly(d-lactic acid) (PDLA).
Mechanical properties of PLA composites.
| PLA Sample Code | Composition | Young’s Modulus (GPa) | Tensile Strength (MPa) | Elongation at Break (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA2 | 100 | 3.48 | 65.15 | 3.29 |
| PLA2/LAK | 99/1 | 3.98 | 64.37 | 5.30 |
| PLA2/talc | 95/5 | / | 59.87 | 2.04 |
| PLA2/PEG | 80/20 | / | 29.59 | 202.7 |
| PLA2/PEG/LAK | 79/20/1 | 1.42 | 29.44 | 177.0 |
| PLA2/PEG/talc | 75/20/5 | / | 35.64 | 132.6 |
| PLA4 | 100 | 3.83 | 69.06 | 2.48 |
| PLA4/PDLA | 99/1 | 3.65 | 71.57 | 4.30 |
| PLA4/PDLA | 95/5 | 3.61 | 67.40 | 2.98 |
| PLA4/PDLA | 90/10 | 4.19 | 68.79 | 3.32 |
| PLA4/PEG | 95/5 | 3.55 | 58.45 | 2.83 |
| PLA4/PEG | 90/10 | 3.16 | 53.83 | 10.25 |
| PLA4/PEG | 80/20 | 1.12 | 20.08 | 174.0 |
| PLA4/PDLA/LAK | 94/5/1 | 3.18 | 64.45 | 5.34 |
| PLA4/PDLA/talc | 90/5/5 | 3.86 | 64.22 | 2.28 |
| PLA/PEG/PDLA | 79/20/1 | 1.08 | 30.40 | 210.30 |
| PLA/PEG/LAK | 79/20/1 | 1.02 | 31.90 | 195.20 |
| PLA/PEG/LAK/talc | 79/10/1/10 | 4.24 | 46.10 | 174.88 |
Notes: Symbol “/” means no value available.