Probing the Nanostructure and Reactivity of Epoxy-Amine Interphases.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Corrosion@Manchester, Department of Materials, The University of Manchester, Nancy Rothwell Building, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, U.K.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the interphase regions in epoxy resins is crucial for enhancing their mechanical properties, like fracture strength and barrier performance, as these areas are often weak spots.
  • Conventional methods struggle to analyze these nanoscale regions, making it hard to understand their formation processes.
  • By using molecular dynamics simulations and infrared mapping, researchers discovered that binding interactions of the amine cross-linker with various metal oxide surfaces affect binding energies, while also revealing that an excess of reactive materials remains near the particles, indicating potential undercuring in the matrix.

Article Abstract

Understanding and controlling the structure of interphase regions in epoxy resins have been a long-standing goal in high-performance composite and coating development, since these are widely considered to be weak points in the microstructure of these materials, determining key properties such as fracture strength and barrier performance. These buried nanoscale regions are, however, inaccessible to conventional analytical techniques, and little is understood about their underlying formation mechanism. Here, we combine molecular dynamics (MD) simulation with nanoscale infrared chemical mapping to develop new understanding of the interphase using model epoxy-amine binders composed of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) cross-linked using -xylylenediamine (MXDA). Iron oxide powders are used as exemplary surfaces, where we demonstrate that the electrostatic binding energies between the amine cross-linker and particles range from repulsive (magnetite, FeO) to weakly attractive (hematite, FeO) to strong immobilization (goethite, FeOOH). We find that interfacial binding occurs upon mixing and determines the overall level of residual amine content in the bulk matrix but does not correlate with a detectable amine depletion in the vicinity of particles. In all cases, an excess of both epoxy and amine functionality is detected close to particles, and the extent of matrix undercuring is found to be dependent on the entropic segregation of the unreacted material during the ambient cure. Detailed MD simulations demonstrate that spatial segregation of the unreacted precursors is expected in the interphase, leading to the experimental observation that, even after extensive postcure heating, individual particles remain embedded in a nanoscale underdeveloped environment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.4c17387DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11660148PMC

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