| Literature DB >> 28516149 |
Hubert Gojzewski1,2, Mariola Sadej3, Ewa Andrzejewska3, Martyna Kokowska3.
Abstract
UV-curable polymer composites are of importance in industry, biomedical applications, scientific fields, and daily life. Outstanding physical properties of polymer composites were achieved with nanoparticles as filler, primarily in enhancing mechanical strength or barrier properties. Structure-property relationships of the resulting nanocomposites are dictated by the polymer-filler molecular architecture, i.e. interactions between polymer matrix and filler, and high surface area to volume ratio of the filler particles. Among monomers, acrylates and methacrylates attracted wide attention due to their ease of polymerization and excellent physicochemical and mechanical properties of the derived polymers. We prepared and photopolymerized two series of formulations containing hydrophobized silica nanofiller (Aerosil R7200) dispersed in 2-hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA) or polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA) monomers. We compared selected physical properties of the formulations, both before and after photocuring; specifically the viscosity of formulations and dispersion of the filler in the polymer matrices. Additionally, we estimated the bulk Poisson׳s ratio of the investigated nanocomposites. This article contains data related to the research article entitled "Nanoscale Young׳s modulus and surface morphology in photocurable polyacrylate/nanosilica composites" (Gojzewski et al., 2017) [1].Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28516149 PMCID: PMC5425337 DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2017.04.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Data Brief ISSN: 2352-3409
Fig. 1Viscosity of formulations of (a) HEA/silica and (b) PEGDA/silica as a function of the shear rate and (c) silica content (at share rate ~20 s−1) at 20 °C. The numbers in the insets indicate the filler content in wt%. The lines are guides to the eye.
Fig. 2(a) SEM micrograph of nanocomposite containing polyHEA+ 10 wt% of the silica Aerosil R7200 content obtained at the fractural edge. Magnified area – indicated by a white window – is shown in (b). The red line divides area of the free and fractured surfaces.
Fig. 3(a) SEM micrograph of nanocomposite containing polyHEA+ 15 wt% of the silica Aerosil R7200 content obtained at the fractural edge. Magnified area – indicated by a white window – is shown in (b). The red line divides area of the free and fractured surfaces.
Fig. 4SEM micrographs obtained at the fractural edge: (a) neat polyPEGDA and (b) polyPEGDA+ 15 wt% of the silica Aerosil R7200 content.
Poisson׳s ratio, , estimated based on the Voigt model (volume weighted Poisson׳s ratios).
| Silica content [wt%] | ||
|---|---|---|
| polyHEA | polyPEGDA | |
| 5 | 0.348 | 0.362 |
| 10 | 0.325 | 0.347 |
| 15 | 0.311 | 0.332 |
| 20 | 0.297 | 0.317 |
| Subject area | Physics, Chemistry |
| More specific subject area | Photocurable polyacrylate-based composites with silica nanoparticles |
| Type of data | Table, text file, figures |
| How data was acquired | Viscometer (model DV-II+ PRO, Brookfield Engineering Laboratories, USA), SEM (model LEO 1530 Gemini, Carl Zeiss NTS, Germany), hydrostatic mass balance (model AD200, AXIS, Poland) |
| Data format | Raw, analyzed |
| Experimental factors | Two series of formulations containing hydrophobized silica nanofiller dispersed in acrylates were prepared and photopolymerized. For SEM analysis composite samples were fractured at room temperature. |
| Experimental features | Viscosities of monomer/silica mixtures, homogeneity of the filler dispersion in the polymer matrix, and the bulk Poisson׳s ratio of the nanocomposites were determined. |
| Data source location | Institute of Physics, Poznan University of Technology, Poznan, Poland |
| Data accessibility | The data are available with this article |