Abstract

The purpose of this study was to obtain information on the influence of the size factor on the climatic aging of circular fiber plastics produced by pultrusion. The kinetics of moisture transfer was obtained in humidification and drying modes at 60 °C in samples of epoxy basalt fiber reinforcement bars: after 28 months of exposure in the extremely cold climate of Yakutsk and 30 months of exposure in the moderately warm climate of Gelendzhik. It was shown that the 2D Langmuir model adequately describes the kinetics. The diffusion coefficients in the reinforcement direction for bars with diameters of 6, 8, 10, 16 and 20 mm turned out to be significantly higher than in the radial direction. To clarify the aging mechanism of the bars and the tensile, compressive and bending strength, the coefficient of linear thermal expansion and the glass transition temperature of the epoxy matrix of the bars with a diameter of 6, 8 and 10 mm after 51 months of exposure in Yakutsk and 54 months of exposure in Gelendzhik were measured. It was shown that after climatic exposure, the deformability of the bars decreased with increasing diameter of the bar; the glass transition temperature increased more significantly in the bar with a smaller diameter. In 6 mm diameter bars, the compressive and bending strength limits decreased by 10–25 % due to the plasticizing effect of moisture. With the same depth of moisture penetration into the volume of the samples, its effect on the strength of thin bars was significant, and for thick bars, it was insignificant. An increase in the glass transition temperature by 6 °C, associated with the additional curing of the polymer matrix, occurred in the surface layer of the epoxy basalt fiber reinforcement bars and was revealed in bars with a smaller diameter.

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