Development and Mechanical Characterization of Halloysite Nanotubes Reinforced Polymer Syntactic Nanocomposite Foams for Weight-Sensitive Structural Applications
Date
2023
Authors
Bakshi, Mohammed Sohail
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute Of Technology Karnataka Surathkal
Abstract
Lightweight syntactic foam composites exhibit high specific strength and
modulus. Thus, these are popularly used, from electric vehicle construction to space
applications. In the present work, syntactic foam composites are fabricated using
cenospheres. Cenosphere, a waste by-product of thermal power plants, is chosen as
hollow filler in composites for eco-friendly redressal curbing its environmental impact.
Also, a halloysite nanotube (HNT) is an abundantly available natural nanofiller that is
utilized to uphold the load-bearing and thermal characteristics of reinforced syntactic
foam (RSF) composites.
The RSF composite fabrication involves the probe sonication of HNTs and
homogenizing them with an epoxy matrix. Later the cenospheres are gently mixed in
the HNTs/epoxy blend to obtain a uniformly dispersed mixture and is thus solution
casted in the aluminum molds. A constant content of 1 vol.% addition of HNTs is
maintained to fabricate all the RSF composites with cenospheres content being varied
from 20 - 50 vol.%. Furthermore, the cenosphere epoxy syntactic foam (CESF)
composites are fabricated without HNTs addition for comparison study. In this work,
the influence of HNTs reinforcement in syntactic foam on mechanical, water
absorption, viscoelastic, and thermal properties are studied. Furthermore, the impact of
post-curing on the mechanical and thermal characteristics is also investigated.
The tensile and flexural tests are carried out to evaluate the mechanical
performance of CESF and HNTs RSF composites. The enhancement in tensile modulus
and flexural modulus was witnessed by up to 42% and 66%, respectively, for the HNTs
RSF as compared to CESF composites. The morphology studies prove the existence of
hydrogen bonding among the HNTs, cenosphere, and neat epoxy matrix in RSF
composite. Field emission-scanning-electron-microscopy (FESEM) affirms the unique
crack deflection phenomenon by HNTs, thus elucidating the structure-property
correlation. Furthermore, the effect of post-curing on flexural and compressive
properties is discussed. The post-cured HNTs RSF containing 40 vol.% cenospheres
(NSF40_H) exhibited a compressive modulus of 33.2% higher than room temperature
cured neat epoxy due to improved crosslinking. The addition of HNTs in NSF40_H
augments the flexural modulus up to 26.9% compared to post-cured neat epoxy.
iiiMoreover, the glass transition temperature (Tg) of CESF composites with 40 vol.%
cenospheres was increased by 24.3 °C compared to the room temperature cured sample.
The positive shift in Tg can be attributed to the beneficial impact of post-curing, as
indicated by differential scanning calorimetry study. A water absorption study is carried
out to characterize the efficiency of the HNTs RSF composites exposed to the marine
environment. The HNTs addition considerably reduces the diffusion coefficient,
sorption coefficient, and permeability of the syntactic foam composites. The
compressive modulus of wet HNTs RSF composite registered a higher value than the
corresponding sample without HNTs.
Dynamic mechanical analysis with temperature sweep (30 – 140 °C) reveal that
the storage and loss modulus of RSFs is 1 - 36% and 59 - 113% higher than the neat
epoxy. Storage modulus increases with an increase in cenospheres content in the epoxy
matrix. However, with the incorporation of HNTs, the storage modulus obtained is
higher than that of neat epoxy but still lower as compared to CESFs. With the increase
in cenospheres content, loss modulus reduces due to increased frictional energy
dissipation compared to matrix viscoelasticity. The thermal studies depict that the Tg
value ameliorates with HNTs reinforcement. Also, better thermal stability with
appreciable char content is reported from gravimetric analysis with HNTs addition.
Further, to understand the underlying mechanism of filler interaction with the matrix,
structure-property correlations of evaluated properties are presented using exhaustive
SEM, FESEM, and TEM images.
Description
Keywords
Halloysite nanotubes, Syntactic foam, Epoxy, Cenosphere