Abstract

The hygroscopic behavior of vinylester resin and high strength glass fiber reinforced vinylester resin composites were examined here, including weight change and the resulting degradation of mechanical properties. The prepared resin and composites specimens were immersed in deionized water and artificial seawater with an applied temperature of 70 °C, and then the specimens were weighed at specified time intervals in combination with the observation of surface morphologies using a scanning electron microscope. Identification of variations of functional groups was also carried out using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Meanwhile, the mechanical properties for resin and the composite specimens were tested periodically. The observations on surficial morphologies and the test on weight change display that the vinylester resin hydrolyzes seriously after immersion in deionized water, and that the embedment of glass fiber effectively inhibits the moisture absorption and hydrolysis for resin matrix in composites. The results from the mechanical properties test reveal that the tensile strength of pure resin decreases by 35.3% after 7 days’ immersion and keeps small fluctuation in the sequent immersion duration. However, the compressive strength of pure resin consistently dwells at 100 ± 2 MPa during immersion. After immersion for 90 days, the tensile strength decreases by 28.5% and 38.4%, the compressive strength reduces by 7.2% and 16.6%, and the in-plane shear strength reduces by 16.6% and 15.2% for the composites immersed into deionized water and artificial seawater, respectively. The main highlights of this paper are that it provides a more comprehensive mechanical properties test in combination with the microscopic characterization on a matrix and its composites to reveal the aging behavior of composites under a hygroscopic environment.

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