| Literature DB >> 30961326 |
Bin Xue1,2, Hezhi He3,4, Zhiwen Zhu5,6, Jiqian Li7,8, Zhaoxia Huang9,10, Guozhen Wang11,12, Ming Chen13,14, Zhiming Zhan15,16.
Abstract
As is an excellent bio-based polymer material, poly(lactic acid) (PLA)'s brittle nature greatly restricts its extensive applications. Herein, poly(butylene succinate) (PBS) was introduced to toughening PLA by melt blending using a self-made triple screw extruder through in situ reactive with ethylene-methyl acrylate-glycidyl methacrylate (EGMA). The effect of EGMA concentrations on the mechanical properties, morphology, interfacial compatibility of PLA/PBS blends were studied. Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) results demonstrated that the epoxy group of EGMA reacts with the hydroxyl groups of PLA and PBS, which proved the occurrence of interfacial reactions among the tri-component. The significantly improved compatibility between PLA and PBS after EGMA incorporation was made evident by scanning electron microscope (SEM) characterization results. Meanwhile, the contact angle test predicted that the EGMA was selectively localized at the interface between PLA and PBS, and the result was verified by morphological analysis of cryofracture and etched samples. The EGMA improves the compatibility of PLA/PBS blends, and consequently leads to a significantly increased toughness with the elongation at break occurring 83 times more when 10 wt % EGMA was introduced than neat PLA, while impact strength also enhanced by twentyfold. Ultimately, the toughening mechanism of PLA based polymers was established based on the above analysis, exploring a new way for the extensive application for degradable material.Entities:
Keywords: compatibility; ethylene-methyl acrylate-glycidyl methacrylate; in situ reactive; poly(butylene succinate) (PBS); poly(lactic acid); toughening mechanism
Year: 2018 PMID: 30961326 PMCID: PMC6401965 DOI: 10.3390/polym10121401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1FT-IR spectra of specimens: (a) 3650–3350 cm−1; (b) 1400–700 cm−1.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of possible reaction routes in PLA/PBS blend with the inclusion of EGMA.
Figure 3The tensile properties of neat PLA, PLA/PBS and PLA/PBS/EGMA blends: (a) strain–stress curves; (b) tensile strength and elongation at break.
Figure 4The impact properties of neat PLA, PLA/PBS and PLA/PBS/EGMA blends: (A) impact strength; (B–C) deformed impact samples: (a) neat PLA; (b) PLA/PBS 70/30; (c–f) PLA/PBS/EGMA (70/30/x): (c) 5 wt %; (d) 10 wt %; (e) 15 wt %; (f) 20 wt %.
Figure 5SEM images of cryofracture and PLA amorphous were etched cryofracture samples: (a–e) cryofracture surfaces; (a’–e’,a’’–e’’) etcyed cryofracture surfaces: (a–a’’) PLA/PBS 70/30; (b–b’’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/5; (c–c’’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/10; (d–d’’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/15; (b–b’’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/20.
Figure 6SEM micrographs of impact fracture surfaces: (a) neat PLA; (b) 70/30; (c) 70/30/5; (d) 70/30/10; (e) 70/30/15; (f) 70/30/20.
The prediction parameters of phase selective localization of PLA, PBS and EGMA.
| Sample | Surface Tension (mN/m) | Interfacial | Spreading | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total (λ) | Dispersion | Polar | |||
|
| 42.29 | 33.27 | 9.02 | γPLA/PBS = 0.9 | λPLA/EGMA/PBS = −9.36 |
|
| 45.46 | 36.44 | 9.01 | γPBS/EGMA = 5.24 | λEGMA/PLA/PBS = −1.12 |
|
| 30.72 | 30.11 | 0.61 | γPLA/EGMA = 5.02 | λEGMA/PBS/PLA = −0.68 |
Figure 7Possible morphologies predicted by spreading coefficients.
Figure 8Schematic illustration of the morphology evolution PLA/PBS blend with the inclusion of EGMA.
Figure 9SEM images of cryofracture surfaces and PLA amorphous were etched cryofracture surfaces:(a–a”) PLA/PBS 50/50; (b–b”) PLA/PBS/EGMA 50/50/10.
Figure 10Evolution of PBS particle shape in phase morphology with the inclusion of EGMA:(a,a’) PLA/PBS 70/30; (b,b’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/10; (c,c’) PLA/PBS/EGMA 70/30/10; (a–c) schematic diagram; (a’–c’) SEM images of cryofracture surfaces; (c”) analysis model.