Abstract

It has been shown in previous works that the interfacial adhesion in PPTA- and PBO-epoxy composites can be improved by modifying the surface properties of these high-performance fibres upon exposure to non-oxidative plasma treatments. In this work, the effects developed on both types of polymer surface were examined as a function of treatment gas nature (He or N2) and exposure time (one or four minutes) using inverse gas chromatography at infinite dilution (IGC). From the adsorption of n-alkanes, it has been proved that non-oxidative plasma treatments led to energetically heterogeneous surfaces in the case of PPTA, and to low-energy surfaces in the case of PBO. Nevertheless, it was proved with the 1-min plasma treatments (either under helium or under nitrogen) that chemical reactivity was enhanced on the PBO surface. Such a behaviour was ascribed to the presence of low-molecular weight oxidized materials. The mechanisms involved in surface activation of PPTA were not equivalent under He or N2 exposure. Nitrogen plasma exposure led to a PPTA surface that is chemically reactive as a result of polarity enhancement. Helium plasma-treated PPTA surface was characterized by the presence of branched arrangements that intensified the number of chemical contacts onto reactive sites. Finally, for both fibre sets, if the purpose is to enhance the chemical surface reactivity, it makes no sense to increase the plasma exposure time from 1 to 4 min.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call