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Original Articles

Preparation and Rheological Characterization of Polymer Nanocomposites Based on Expanded Graphite

, , , &
Pages 591-598 | Received 01 Jan 2007, Accepted 01 Jan 2007, Published online: 13 Apr 2007
 

A new type of conductive filler, namely expanded graphite (EG), was used to prepare novel nanocomposites. The EG was incorporated into several rather different polymers, specifically polycarbonate (PC), low‐density polyethylene (LDPE), isotactic polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS), using melt mixing in a small‐scale DACA‐Microcompounder. The EG content was varied between 1 and 20 wt%. The rheological properties and morphologies of the nanocomposites were characterized by melt rheology and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), respectively. The melt‐state linear viscoelastic properties were investigated using an ARES rheometer, with the measurements performed in the dynamic mode at various temperatures over a wide range of frequencies. Addition of the EG increased the linear dynamic moduli and melt viscosity of the materials. Up to a certain critical concentration of EG, the materials exhibited a simple liquid‐like behavior. Above this concentration, however, significant changes in the frequency dependences of the moduli and viscosity were observed. In addition, the moduli showed a liquid‐solid transition resulting in a second plateau in the low frequency‐regime, and the complex viscosity revealed shear‐thinning behavior. Specific values of this percolation concentration were found to be at around 4 wt% in the case of PC/EG, 9 wt% for PP/EG and PS/EG, and 12 wt% for PE/EG. This critical concentration was correlated to a network‐like structure formed through interactions between the EG platelets and the polymers. The extent of these complications was found to vary from polymer to polymer, presumably due to different degrees of EG exfoliation and dispersion arising from different EG‐polymer interactions and from variable shearing forces dependent on the polymer viscosities. The formation of network‐like structures is very sensitively displayed using van Gurp‐Palmen plots, which are most suitable for identifying “rheological percolation” in our investigated systems.

5 Acknowledgments

JEM wishes to acknowledge with gratitude the financial support he received from the National Science Foundation through Grant DMR‐0314760 (Polymers Program, Division of Materials Research). He would also like to thank his colleagues at the Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research Dresden for their help and hospitality during a two‐month visit there during the summer of 2004. Finally, the authors are pleased to acknowledge the help of Dr. K.‐W. Stoeckelhuber (IPF Dresden) for his measurements of the surface energies of the EG samples employed in this investigation and the assistance of S. Pegel (IPF Dresden) in SEM studies.

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