| Literature DB >> 31330943 |
C Cabello-Alvarado1,2, P Reyes-Rodríguez2, M Andrade-Guel2, G Cadenas-Pliego3, M Pérez-Alvarez4, V J Cruz-Delgado5, L Melo-López1,2, Z V Quiñones-Jurado6, C A Ávila-Orta7.
Abstract
The study of polymeric nanocomposites is a possible alternative to conventional flame retardants. The aim of the present work is to investigate the effects of carbon-nanotubes (CNT) and TiO2 nanoparticles (NPs) on the thermo-mechanical, flammability, and electrical properties of polypropylene (PP). In this work, PP-TiO2/CNT nanocomposites were obtained with TiO2/CNT mixtures (ratio 1:2) through the melt extrusion process, with different weight percentage of nanoparticles (1, 5, and 10 wt %). The PP-TiO2/CNT nanocomposites were characterized by DSC, TGA, MFI, FTIR, XRD, and SEM. It was possible to determine that the thermal stability of the PP increases when increasing the content of NPs. A contrary situation is observed in the degree of crystallinity and thermo-oxidative degradation, which decreased with respect to pure PP. The TiO2 NPs undergo coalition and increase their size at a lower viscosity of the nanocomposite (1 and 5 wt %). The mechanical properties decreased slightly, however, the Young's modulus presented an improvement of 10% as well as electrical conductivity, this behavior was noted in nanocomposites of 10 wt % of NPs. Flammability properties were measured with a cone calorimeter, and a reduction in the peak heat release rate was observed in nanocomposites with contents of nanoparticles of 5 and 10 wt.Entities:
Keywords: carbon nanotube; nanocomposite; polypropylene; titanium dioxide
Year: 2019 PMID: 31330943 PMCID: PMC6680381 DOI: 10.3390/polym11071204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Configuration for the extrusion process.
Compounding formulations polypropylene-carbon-nanotubes (PP-TiO2/CNT-X).
| Sample | CNT + TiO2 (wt %) | PP (g) | TiO2/CNT (g) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 0 | 200 | 0 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 1 | 198 | 2 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 5 | 190 | 10 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 10 | 180 | 20 |
Figure 2X-ray diffraction patterns of nanocomposite PP-TiO2/CNT (1,5,10%), polypropylene (PP), carbon-nanotubes (CNT) and TiO2.
Figure 3FT-IR spectra of nanocomposite PP-TiO2/CNT (1, 5 and 10%), polypropylene (PP), carbon nanotubes (CNT) and TiO2.
Flow index of the samples analyzed.
| Sample | MFI (g/10 min) |
|---|---|
| PP | 0.76 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 0.56 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 0.40 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 0.24 |
Figure 4Thermogravimetric analysis of polypropylene (PP) and nanocomposites PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon nanotubes).
Thermal properties of nanocomposite of polypropylene-carbon-nanotubes (PP-TiO2/CNT).
| Sample | T5% (°C) | T50% (°C) | Tmax (°C) | Residue at 550 °C (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 417 | 454 | 459 | 0 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 435 | 460 | 462 | 1.00 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 448 | 469 | 472. | 4.92 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 454 | 474 | 475 | 8.02 |
Figure 5Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) crystallization exotherms of pure polypropylene (PP) and PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon nanotubes) (1, 5, 10%).
Figure 6Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) fusion endotherms of pure polypropylene (PP) and PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon nanotubes) (1, 5, 10%).
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) date for polypropylene (PP) and nanocomposites PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon nanotubes) (1, 5 y 10%).
| Nanocomposite | Tm (°C) | Enthalpy of Fusion (J/g) | Enthalpy of Crystallization (J/g) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 156.93 | 95.82 | 93.72 | 45.84 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 156.16 | 93.45 | 95.35 | 44.71 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 157.14 | 91.06 | 92.82 | 43.56 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 157.07 | 88.75 | 93.63 | 42.46 |
Figure 7SEM micrographs of nanocomposites. (a) polypropylene-carbon-nanotubes (PP-TiO2/CNT-1), (b) PP-TiO2/CNT-5 and (c) PP-TiO2/CNT-10.
Electrical properties of polypropylene (PP) and PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon-nanotubes) nanocomposites.
| Sample | Surface Resistance Ω/sq | Volumetric Resistance Ω cm | Electric Conductivity S/m |
|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 2.35 × 1013 | 1 × 1018 | 1 × 10−18 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 6 × 10 16 | 3 × 1017 | 3.0 × 10−18 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 3 × 1012 | 5 × 1016 | 2.0 × 10−17 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 6.5 × 109 | 7.2 × 109 | 1.4 × 10−10 |
Tensile properties of polypropylene (PP) and PP-TiO2/CNT (carbon nanotubes) nanocomposites.
| Sample | Xc | Tensile Strength (MPa) | Nominal Strain at Break (%) | Young’s Modulus (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 56.36 | 23.93 ± 0.12 | 53.37 | 971.57 ± 29.1 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 54.97 | 23.93 ± 0.19 | 45.78 | 894.98 ± 27.1 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 53.56 | 23.32 ± 0.08 | 33.24 | 961.28 ± 31.0 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 52.20 | 22.75 ± 0.37 | 22.28 | 1077.44 ± 26.2 |
Figure 8Calorimetric measurements (a) Comparison of the peaks of the heat release rate (HRR), (b) Photographs of residual material after the cone calorimetric test (c) HRR curves for the results.
Data of the calorimetric cone test of the samples analyzed.
| Sample | Peak HRR (kW/m²) | THR (MJ/m²) | Residue (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 1529.53 | 66.42 | 0.09 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-1 | 1593.83 | 65.91 | 34.3 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-5 | 1058.49 | 43.49 | 88.4 |
| PP-TiO2/CNT-10 | 1079.94 | 44.06 | 91.9 |