Abstract

AbstractConventional approaches to toughen thermosets are: (1) the polymerization‐induced phase separation of a rubber or a thermoplastic, or (2) the use of a dispersion of preformed particles in the initial formulation. In the present study it is shown that it is possible to combine both techniques by using graft copolymers with one of the blocks being initially immiscible and the other that phase separates during polymerization. This is illustrated by the use of poly(ethylene‐co‐vinyl acetate)‐graft‐poly(methyl methacrylate) (EVA‐graft‐PMMA) as modifier of an epoxy resin. EVA is initially immiscible and PMMA phase separates during polymerization. Blends of an epoxy monomer based on diglycidylether of bisphenol A (DGEBA, 100 parts by weight), piperidine (5 parts by weight), and PMMA (5 parts by weight), showed the typical polymerization‐induced phase separation of PMMA‐rich domains before gelation of the epoxy network. Replacing PMMA by EVA‐graft‐PMMA (5 parts by weight), yielded stable dispersions of EVA blocks, favoured by the initial solubility of PMMA blocks. Phase separation of PMMA blocks in the course of polymerization led to a dispersion of in situ generated biphasic particles (plausibly composed of EVA cores surrounded by PMMA shells), with average diameters varying from 0.3 to 0.6 µm with the cure temperature. This procedure may be used to generate stable dispersions of biphasic particles for toughening purposes.© 2002 Society of Chemical Industry

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