Polymers, Vol. 17, Pages 1998: Relationship Between Filler Type, Thermomechanical Properties, and Aging of RTV Silicone Foams
Polymers doi: 10.3390/polym17141998
Authors:
Xavier M. Torres
John R. Stockdale
Adam Pacheco
Shelbie A. Legett
Lindsey B. Bezek
Bart Benedikt
Andrea Labouriau
Santosh Adhikari
Room-temperature vulcanizing (RTV) silicone foams are used in many industrial applications that require the material to perform over long time periods. However, mechanical properties tend to deteriorate when these foams age under a compressive load. The chemical aging is attributed to the presence of unreacted functional groups of the prepolymers, residues from acid, and catalytically active tin (II) species. Here, an optimized thermal treatment of an RTV foam that achieves completion of curing reactions and deactivation of reactive species is proposed. Foams that were thermally aged for three months under compressive load showed no signs of compression set, indicative of the effectiveness of the implemented post-curing approach. In addition, the effects of fillers (diatomaceous earth, fumed silica, and carbon nanofibers) on thermomechanical properties were investigated. Tensile strength, tear strength, and thermal conductivity increased when these fillers were added to the unfilled RTV formulation, with carbon nanofibers (CNFs) being the most effective filler. Rheological studies of RTV formulations indicated that 2.5 wt.% of CNFs is the upper limit that can be added to the RTV formulation.
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Xavier M. Torres www.mdpi.com