Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7170902 | International Journal of Adhesion and Adhesives | 2018 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
Boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) offer complimentary properties to carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and interact more favorably with epoxies than do CNTs. This could make BNNTs the preferred nanotube for reinforcing epoxy when electrical conductivity is not required, and particularly where features such as transparency/color, neutron absorption or electrical insulation are advantageous. Here we report epoxy nanocomposites containing 1-7â¯wt% raw BNNTs. The elastic modulus and fracture toughness increased progressively with loading up to 5â¯wt% BNNTs. Adhesive joints (ASTM D1002) indicated average improvements of ~10% in joint strength at 2â¯wt% raw BNNTs, but substantially reduced strength for a 5â¯wt% BNNT adhesive joint. Observation of the failure surfaces suggests that BNNTs impede crack propagation leading to increased joint performance despite a mixed-mode failure with a substantial contribution from adhesive failure. BNNTs purified by removing the elemental boron impurity were more effective, yielding 15% joint strength improvements at 1â¯wt% loading. This nanocomposite is also semi-transparent, showing the potential for reinforced, electrically insulating, transparent adhesives based on BNNTs.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Authors
Michael B. Jakubinek, Behnam Ashrafi, Yadienka Martinez-Rubi, Meysam Rahmat, Mostafa Yourdkhani, Keun Su Kim, Kurtis Laqua, Ali Yousefpour, Benoit Simard,