4.1 Article

Effect of Surface Structure of Nano-CaCO3 Particles on Mechanical and Rheological Properties of PVC Composites

Journal

JOURNAL OF MACROMOLECULAR SCIENCE PART B-PHYSICS
Volume 49, Issue 5, Pages 970-982

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/00222341003609336

Keywords

interface adhesion; nano-CaCO3 particles; nanocomposites; poly (vinyl chloride); surface modification

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [20925621, 20706015, 50703009]
  2. Program of Shanghai Subject Chief Scientist [08XD1401500]
  3. Special Projects for Key Laboratories in Shanghai [09DZ2202000]
  4. Shanghai Shuguang Scholars Tracking Program [08GG09]
  5. Special Projects for Nanotechnology of Shanghai [0952nm0200, 0952nm02100]
  6. Shanghai Pujiang Program [09PJ1403200]
  7. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [WD0914022]

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To study the effect of different surface structures on resultant mechanical and rheological properties, nano-CaCO3 particles were treated with isopropyl tri-stearyl titanate (H928), isopropyl tri-(dodecylbenz-enesulfonyl) titanate (JN198), and isopropyl tri-(dioctylpyrophosphato) titanate (JN114). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and dynamic mechanic analysis (DMA), carried out to characterize the effective interfacial interaction between the nano-CaCO3 particles and a poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) matrix, indicated that JN114 treated nano-CaCO3 particles had the strongest interfacial interaction with a PVC matrix, while H928 treated nano-CaCO3 had the weakest. The rheological and mechanical properties of PVC/nano-CaCO3 composites were investigated as a function of surface structure and filler volume fraction. The tensile yield stress and elongation at break decreased with the increasing of calcium carbonate content while tensile modulus increased. PVC filled with JN114 treated nano-CaCO3 had the highest tensile modulus and tensile yield stress, while those filled with H928 treated nano-CaCO3 had the highest elongation at break at the same filler content. The impact strength of PVC/nano-CaCO3 composites increased with the increasing of CaCO3 content, and PVC composites filled with JN198 treated nano-CaCO3 particle had a higher impact strength than those with JN114 or H928 treated, with the value reaching 23.9 +/- 0.7 kJ/m2 at 11 vol% CaCO3, four times as high as that of pure PVC. Rheological properties indicated that a suitable interfacial interaction and a good dispersion of inorganic filler in a PVC matrix could reduce the viscosity of PVC/nano-CaCO3 composites. The interfacial interaction was quantitatively characterized by semiempirical parameters calculated from the tensile strength of PVC/nano-CaCO3 composites to confirm the results from the SEM and DMA experiments.

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