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Original Articles

Structure and Mechanical Stability of Epoxy Modified Polyurethane Foam Under Heat and Stress

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Pages 113-127 | Received 02 Sep 2016, Accepted 10 Aug 2018, Published online: 28 Dec 2018
 

Abstract

A series of phenolic epoxy resin (PEP) modified polyurethane foams (PUF) were prepared via an in-situ polymerization, one step process. It was found that the epoxy modified PUF foam exhibited a perforated network structure with larger cell size, higher open cell porosity and enhanced ovality compared with pure PUF. With increasing content of PEP, the tensile strength, elongation at break and low temperature modulus of PUF decreased. A single Tg was observed for PEP modified PUF, indicating that the two component phases of the polyurethane-epoxy were miscible. With increasing PEP content, the Tg of PUF shifted slightly to higher temperature, tan δmax dropped to lower values, and the retention value of the storage modulus at −20 and −10 °C increased. For pure PUF, the cell walls degraded and the structure became disordered after aging under heat and stress, while for PUF/20wt%PEP, the degradation degree was obviously reduced, and an orientation of the cells along the stress direction and a density increase was observed. During aging at 200 °C, the retention of the mechanical properties of PUF/20wt% PEP was much higher than that of pure PUF, and it showed superior stability under heat and stress, attributed to incorporation of the thermally resistant oxazolidone rings and benzene rings in the PU backbones, the highly cross-linked networks of the polyurethane-epoxy systems and the obvious orientation of the cells under stress.

Additional information

Funding

This study was financially supported by the Joint Fund of National Natural Science Foundation of China and China Academy of Engineering Physics (NSAF) (Grant No. U1530144).

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