Investigation on thermal-mechanical degradation, rheological and mechanical properties of polypropylene-ethylene/silica composites
Abstract
The thermal-mechanical degradation resulting from heated two roll mill of silica
filled polypropylene-ethylene (PPE) composites was investigated. The influence of
processing temperature and silica loading was studied and focused on rheological and
mechanical properties of the PPE/silica composite. Thermal-mechanical degradation was
found to occur in neat PPE and PPE/Si composites. The degradation mechanism in neat
PPE was chains scission and produced more cis and trans alkene. FTIR identified that the
degradation level became greater when processing temperature for PPE copolymer
increased, especially at 170 °C.Thermal-mechanical degradation exhibited higher melt flow
index as molecular weight decreased due to chains scission. Chains scission is also the
reason to decline tensile properties of PPE copolymer. The influence of silica loading on
thermal-mechanical degradation of PPE/Si composites was determined by the FTIR spectra
analysis. The oxidization was found to occur and a tertiary alcohol spectrum was detected
by FTIR. The result was confirmed with TGA testing. The higher silica content, the more
thermal-mechanical degradation was. The tensile fracture morphology showed that silica at
above 10 wt% content tended to aggregate and agglomerate. Therefore, excess silica caused
more internal stress during compounding and increased the thermal-mechanical degradation.
In fact, tertiary alcohol was only present in PPE/Si composite.