Effect of new hyperbranched polyester of varying generations on toughening of epoxy resin through interpenetrating polymer networks using urethane linkages

2013 
Abstract In this study, a previously unreported methodology is attempted to improve the inherent brittleness in diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A based epoxy resin using hyperbranched polymers as toughening agents. Four different hyperbranched polyesters (HBPs) with increasing generations (1–4, denoted as HBP-G1 to HBP-G4) were synthesized by reacting calculated amount of dipentaerythritol (used as a core) and dimethylol propionic acid (AB 2 type monomer) through pseudo one-step melt polycondensation method. The newly synthesized HBPs were characterized using spectral, thermal and physical measurements, which confirmed the formation of highly branched structure and decreasing thermal stability with increasing HBP generations. Further, toughening of the epoxy resin is carried out by reacting each generation of the HBP with epoxy using hexamethylene diisocyanate as an intermediate linkage resulting in the formation of HBP-Polyurethane/Epoxy-g-Interpenetrating Polymer Networks (HBP-PU/EP-g-IPNs). A linear polyol-PU/EP-g-IPN is also synthesized for the purpose of comparison. It is found that the HBP modified epoxy samples exhibited higher toughness in comparison to that of neat epoxy and linear polyol based epoxy samples. On the other hand, flexural properties, thermal stability and glass transition temperature of the modified samples is lower than neat epoxy sample due to the existence of flexible urethane linkages and decrease in the cross-linking density of epoxy matrix. The toughening characteristics exhibited by the HBPs are corroborated from the existence of heterogeneous morphology using SEM data.
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