Abstract

Organically-modified montmorillonite clay nanocomposites of poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (SAN), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and SAN/PMMA miscible blend are investigated. Structure characteristics at the nanoscale and microscale and thermal and tensile properties are studied as a function of polymer blend composition and filler loading fraction. Blend miscibility and Tg are unaffected by up to 10% by wt. organoclay. Thermal degradation stability increases with SAN content and exhibits an optimum value of clay loading. Stiffness shows significant improvement. Tensile strength and elongation-at-break suffer as a result of nanocomposite formation. Modulus shows a maximum enhancement of 57% (5 ± 0.06 GPa at 10 wt% filler, 20/80 SAN/PMMA) and varies linearly with clay fraction for all compositions of matrix phase. Predictions of Halpin–Tsai composite model are in excellent agreement with the experimental behavior over full range of polymer blend composition. Fundamental aspects of a polymer blend–clay nanocomposite are clarified, such as lack of additional synergy between clay platelets and matrix, and tensile ductility reduction, compared with polymer–clay system. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 2011. © 2011 Society of Plastics Engineers

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