2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(670f) The Production and Properties of Exfoliated Polyethylene-Clay Nanocomposites
Here we demonstrate that a continuous, industrially applicable process called solid state shear pulverization (SSSP) can produce well-exfoliated polymer-clay nanocomposites. The SSSP process employs a cooled, modified twin-screw extruder that maintains the polymer in the solid state. During SSSP, the material is exposed to high compressive and shear forces, undergoing fragmentation and fusion cycles. This results in exfoliation of clay in polymer that is kinetically stable to long-term, high-temperature melt processing. The structure, thermal stability, mechanical strength, and barrier properties of the well-exfoliated nanocomposites are investigated using x-ray diffraction, electron microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, thermogravimetric analysis, dynamic mechanical analysis, and oxygen permeation. Because SSSP can tune the level of exfoliation, a fundamental understanding of how clay dispersion affects macroscopic properties of nanocomposites will be gained, in addition to insight on the behavior of polymer in a confined state.