Polypropylene fibers containing various concentrations of spherical (technical carbon) and anisotropic (nanofibers, nanotubes) carbon nanoparticles were prepared under laboratory conditions. The mechanical properties of the composite fibers were determined. It was shown that their strength and elasticity modulus increased by ~1.5 times only upon adding small concentrations (1-5 mass%) of anisotropic particles. Adding technical carbon at all concentrations decreased the fiber strength and fracture bending with an insignificant increase of elasticity modulus. The development of nanocomposites based on polymeric matrices is a promising area of contemporary materials science. Electrically conductive additives such as soot, graphite, chopped fibers, and metal powders are used to decrease charging during processing of synthetic materials and use of items made of them. However, synthetic composites with stable anti-static properties can be produced only by adding large concentrations (10-20 mass%) of these fillers [1-3]. It is worth noting that filled samples are weaker than the starting polymer. Fillers with particle sizes from several nanometers to tens of nanometers, i.e., carbon nanofibers and nanotubes, are beginning to play an increasingly important role. Such fillers can produce polymer composites with controlled mechanical, electrical, and other transport properties. It was shown [4] that the threshold concentrations of electrically conductive fillers that were required for stable anti-static protection of the polymer matrix could be reduced considerably from 15 mass% for technical carbon (TC) to 0.5 mass% for nanotubes by increasing the axial ratio of the nanoparticles. It was also demonstrated [5-7] that the mechanical properties of nanocomposites with anisotropic nanoparticles could be increased by preliminary orientation of carbon nanofibers (CNF) along the fiber axis during spinning of the composite from the melt. The literature on the strength of composites containing carbon nanotubes (CNT) and CNF [8-12] indicates that the strength of nanocomposites can be increased only with small (<5 mass%) additions of nanofillers. Increasing the concentration further does not affect the strength or even lowers it. The elasticity modulus of such materials can be increased by ~1.5 times with the same low nanoparticle concentrations and then almost does not change. As a rule, blocks or films were investigated in many publications focused on the physical-mechanical properties of nanocomposites with anisotropic nanoparticles [5, 6, 13-15]. Nevertheless, industrial manufacturing of polymers used to fabricate textiles is often accompanied by additional oriented drawing at elevated temperatures [16, 17]. This can improve the mechanical and operating properties of the final products. The influence of the type, shape, and concentration of dispersed nanoparticles on the bending and tensile properties of a single polymeric matrix subjected to oriented drawing is practically unstudied.
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