Affiliation:
1. Department of Materials Engineering, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, São Paulo, Brazil
Abstract
Different concentrations of multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) and carboxyl functionalized MWCNT (MWCNT-COOH) were added to a high melt strength polypropylene (HMS-PP) to produce foams with high dielectric constants, using azodicarbonamide (AZO) as blowing agent. The AZO foaming behavior and the crystallization, thermal properties, steady state and oscillatory shear rheological properties of the nanocomposites were analyzed by polarized light optical microscopy (PLOM), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), thermogravimetry analyses (TGA) and parallel plate rheometry. The morphology, the dielectric and dynamic mechanical properties (DMTA) of the foams were also studied by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), impedance spectroscopy and bending method, respectively. A decrease in crystallite size and an increase in the HMS-PP overall crystallinity promoted by the presence of both types of MWCNTs was observed, as well as an increase in the crystallization temperatures. From these results and from the analyses of the rheological properties, it was possible to predict that the 5 wt.% MWCNT foam would have the lowest bubble growth rate, the 1.5 wt.% MWCNT-COOH the highest, while the 3 wt.% MWCNT-COOH composition would have the slowest bubble stability (and consequently the highest cellular density) and the 1.5 wt.% MWCNT-COOH the fastest. Also, it was possible to predict that only the 5 wt.% MWCNT-COOH foam would have a percolated and electrically conductive structure. All these predictions were confirmed by the resultant morphology and impedance spectroscopy results. The highest mechanical damping was displayed by the 3 wt.% MWCNT-COOH foam, while the lowest by the 5 wt.% MWCNT-COOH foam. Regarding the dielectric properties, the 1.5 wt% MWCNT-COOH foam was found to be the most suitable to be used as a capacitor material; this foam was also the less dense of all the samples.
Subject
Materials Chemistry,Polymers and Plastics,General Chemistry
Cited by
5 articles.
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