Artículos de revistas
Effect of morphology on the permeability, mechanical and thermal properties of polypropylene/SiO2 nanocomposites
Fecha
2015Registro en:
PolymInt 2015; 64: 1245–1251
DOI: 10.1002/pi.4909
Autor
Gómez Soto, Moisés
Bracho García, Diego
Palza Cordero, Humberto
Quijada Abarca, Juan
Institución
Resumen
Spherical silica nanoparticles with 20 and 100 nm diameters and organic-template layered silica nanoparticles synthesized
by the sol-gel method were melt blended with a polypropylene (PP) matrix in order to study and quantify their effect on
the oxygen and water vapor permeability and mechanical and thermal behavior. With regard to barrier properties, the
spherical nanoparticles barely increased the oxygen permeability at lowloads (≤10 wt%);meanwhile the layered nanoparticles
dramatically increased it even at low loading (<5 wt%) probably due to the percolation effect. The changes in water vapor
permeability were similar to those in oxygen permeability. The repulsive interaction between nanoparticles and PP forms
interconnecting voids where the gas permeates. Tensile stress–strain tests showed that the composites present up to a 56%
increase in the elastic modulus with spherical nanoparticles at 20 wt%, while layered nanoparticles show a decrease probably
due to agglomerations and voids. Thermogravimetric analysis under inert conditions showed that the nanoparticles improved
the PP thermal degradation process through the adsorption of volatile compounds on their surface, where the smaller spherical
nanoparticles show the greatest stabilization.