18 research outputs found

    Toughening of glassy amorphous polymers via chemically-induced phase separation

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    Toughening of glassy amorphous polymers via chemically-induced phase separation

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    Intrathecale toediening van morfine en bupivacaïne ter behandeling van ernstige pijn bij chronische pancreatitis

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    Processing of (in)tractable polymers using reactive solvents. Part 5: morphology control during phase separation

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    Processing of intractable polymers using reactive solvents (monomers) has been studied extensively in our laboratory, notably the system poly(phenylene ether) (PPE)/epoxy (resin). PPE can be dissolved at elevated temperatures in epoxy resin and the solution can be easily transferred into a mould or into a fabric. Upon curing the epoxy resin, phase separation and phase inversion occurs and the originally dissolved PPE becomes the continuous matrix phase. The dispersed (cured thermoset) epoxy particles become an integrated part of the system and could act as fillers or as toughening agents, depending on the type of epoxy resin used. An important parameter for the (ultimate) physical and mechanical properties is the size of the dispersed particles. The aim of the present study is to control the morphology development in order to produce a dispersed phase in the sub-micron to nanometre range. The size of the dispersed phase will be determined by the competition between the coarsening rate, e.g. by the coalescence of dispersed droplets, and the vitrification and/or gelation rate induced by curing. For the coarsening process, the viscosity of the system plays an important role which is usually mainly determined by the temperature. However, in the case of PPE/epoxy, the viscosity can be controlled at a chosen curing temperature by adding polystyrene. The ternary phase diagram shows that the miscibility of PPE–polystyrene (PS) is retained upon the addition of epoxy at relatively low concentrations. However, thermally induced phase separation upon cooling occurs for solutions with an epoxy content of 30 wt% and more. Upon curing, a two phase morphology is obtained in which the PPE–PS phase acts, as expected, as one single phase. The size of the dispersed phase can be decreased by one order of magnitude if curing is performed at the glass transition temperature, Tg, of the initial solution, attributed to the high viscosity at Tg that slows down coalescence. During the additional post-curing steps, necessary to reach a maximum epoxy conversion, these original morphologies are maintained. In conclusion, by controlling the polymerisation temperature, relative with reference to the Tg of the original solution, the final morphology of the chemically induced phase separated systems can be tuned

    Rubber-modified glassy amorphous polymers prepared via chemically induced phase separation. 3. Influence of the strain rate on the microscopic deformation mechanism

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    The mode of microscopic deformation during impact testing of a 80/20 PMMA/rubber blend has been examined by in situ small-angle X-ray scattering using synchrotron radiation. As discussed previously, the blend studied possesses an extremely small dispersed rubber phase prepared via chemically induced phase separation and responds as ductile during tensile deformation but suffers from brittle failure under impact conditions. In part 2, it was shown that the ductile behavior is accompanied by cavitation which relieves the triaxial stress state and, subsequently, promotes shear yielding. The present study demonstrates that increasing the strain rate leads to an enhancement of the nucleation of voids combined with a decreasing tendency for void orientation upon tensile deformation. By the introduction of a notch, the deformation rate is enhanced even further, and the mode of microscopic deformation transforms to crazing, which explains the poor macroscopic impact toughness. Precavitation of the samples, however, restores the toughness, even under impact condition

    Pain management in chronic pancreatitis

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