Solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and small-to wide-angle X-ray scattering (SWAXS) methods were used to characterize the heterogeneous dynamics and polymer domain structure in rubber modified thermoset materials containing the diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) epoxy resin and a mixture of Jeffamine reactive rubber and 4,4-diaminodicyclohexylmethane (PACM) amine curing agent. The polymer chain dynamics and morphologies as a function of the PACM/Jeffamine ratio were determined. Using dipolar-filtered NMR experiments, the resulting networks are shown to be composed of mobile and rigid regions that are separated on nanometer length scales, along with a dynamically immobilized interface region. Proton NMR spin diffusion experiments measured the dimensions of the mobile phase to range between 9 and 66 nm and varied with the relative PACM concentration. Solid state 13C magic angle spinning NMR experiments show that the highly mobile phase is composed entirely of the dynamically flexible polyether chains of the Jeffamine rubber, the immobilized interface region is a mixture of DGEBA, PACM, and the Jeffamine rubber, with the PACM cross-linked to DGEBA predominantly residing in the rigid phase. The SWAXS results showed compositional nanophase separation spanning the 11–77 nm range. These measurements of the nanoscale compositional and dynamic heterogeneity provide molecular level insight into the very broad and controllable glass transition temperature distributions observed for these highly cross-linked polymer networks.
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