Rodrigo Ramírez-Aguilar, Cecilia Zárate-Pérez, E. A. Franco-Urquiza
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The aerospace sector uses butyl rubber to manufacture carbon fiber components through an autoclave or infusion. Both manufacturing techniques require a high vacuum to achieve adequate impregnation of the carbon fiber fabrics with epoxy resin, and butyl rubber is used as the sealant. The aerospace sector discontinues materials with shelf life expired, and butyl rubber is one of the materials most discontinued for not being used within the designated time. This work presents the development of composites using polypropylene and discontinued butyl tape. Composites with 30, 50, and 70 wt% of butyl rubber content were prepared using a twin-screw extruder. The structural analysis showed that the composites with 50 wt% and 70 wt% are similar to butyl rubber, while the compound with 30 wt% of butyl is similar to polypropylene. The degree of crystallinity of the compound with 50 wt% of butyl content was 18% higher than the PP, and the melting temperature decreased by 30% with the higher butyl content. SSA revealed that the highest enthalpic contribution occurred in the crystalline fraction of higher perfection, except for the compound with 50 wt% of butyl content, whose less perfect crystalline populations grew at the expense of the most perfect crystals. The reduction of the crystalline fraction implies that butyl interferes with the formation of crystals, developing populations with lower lamellar thickness that favors the overall crystallinity of the compound. Young’s modulus, yield strength, and nominal strain decreased with butyl rubber content. The composites showed rough failure surfaces with solid butyl rubber particles and poor adhesion to polypropylene. Butyl particles with diverse sizes and geometries lead to sudden failure of the composites and high dispersion in strain values.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Reinforced Plastics and Composites is a fully peer-reviewed international journal that publishes original research and review articles on a broad range of today''s reinforced plastics and composites including areas in:
Constituent materials: matrix materials, reinforcements and coatings.
Properties and performance: The results of testing, predictive models, and in-service evaluation of a wide range of materials are published, providing the reader with extensive properties data for reference.
Analysis and design: Frequency reports on these subjects inform the reader of analytical techniques, design processes and the many design options available in materials composition.
Processing and fabrication: There is increased interest among materials engineers in cost-effective processing.
Applications: Reports on new materials R&D are often related to the service requirements of specific application areas, such as automotive, marine, construction and aviation.
Reports on special topics are regularly included such as recycling, environmental effects, novel materials, computer-aided design, predictive modelling, and "smart" composite materials.
"The articles in the Journal of Reinforced Plastics and Products are must reading for engineers in industry and for researchers working on leading edge problems" Professor Emeritus Stephen W Tsai National Sun Yat-sen University, Taiwan
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