Abstract

Acrylic polymers possessing varying proportions of pendant phenol groups were synthesized by the free radical copolymerization of N-(4-hydroxyphenyl) maleimide (HPM) with butyl acrylate (BuA) and acrylonitrile (AN) and characterized. These thermoplastics form excellent films and their mechanical and adhesion properties were evaluated as a function of the phenol content. Enhancing the HPM content increased both the tensile strength and the modulus but decreased the elongation. A nominal increase in the phenol content was found to be conducive for improving the adhesion properties of the films. At higher concentrations, the adhesion properties showed a decreasing trend due to the embrittlement caused by the rigid maleimide groups. The adhesion property at 50°C increased linearly with the HPM content due to an increased T g, whereas a reverse trend was observed for the adhesion property measured at-196°C, due to the dominance of the embrittlement effect. The reduced flow characteristics of the high HPM-loaded systems led to a diminished honeycomb flat-wise tensile strength. Enhancing the HPM concentration in the chain promoted the adhesion properties for the vulcanization bonding of nitrile rubber to aluminium. Addition of silica filler marginally improved the lap shear strength (LSS) for the metal-metal system, but was detrimental for rubber-metal bonding; a reverse trend was observed for the carbon-filled system. The diminished performance for metal-metal bonding by carbon could be attributed to the weakening of the interphase, whereas the enhanced rubber-metal bonding could be due to possible reinforcement of the rubber phase by carbon. The fillers generally improved the high temperature adhesion. However, they impaired the flow properties of the resin and, thereby, adversely affected the flat-wise tensile strength in both cases.

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