Abstract

The research proposed an aqueous emulsion foaming process to produce a viscoelastic epoxy foam having a density of 0.33–0.36 g/cm3 from the polyamide–epoxy adduct, which uses a reverse ratio of epoxy and polyamide hardener. The process is simple, economical and uses no surfactant, thanks to the emulsifying ability of polyamide hardener. Firstly, the mixture of excess polyamide, epoxy and sodium bicarbonate was emulsified with distilled water using high-speed stirring to form dispersed epoxy droplets in water. Secondly, a solution of ammonium chloride was added, which reacted with sodium bicarbonate to produce carbon dioxide and ammonia gases dispersed in the epoxy emulsion. The expanding gases induced flocculation and partial coalescence of the epoxy droplets; sequentially water molecules were entrapped within them. Finally, a curing process was carried out to stabilise the foam morphology and structure. Two types of pore morphologies were observed: a large foam-pore generated from blowing-agent gases and a cell-wall pore formed from the vapourisation of entrapped water (as the void template). Porosity and pore morphologies depended on blowing-agent content, and the viscoelasticity was affected by the epoxy/polyamide ratio. The obtained viscoelastic foams showed a large number of interconnected cells and exhibited high compression set values.

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