Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
820742 | Composites Science and Technology | 2013 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Thermally-exfoliated graphite oxide (TEGO) is a graphene-based material that has been previously shown to disperse effectively into thermoplastic polymers by melt processing. In this work, dispersion of TEGO into natural rubber (NR) directly on a two-roll mill did not result in substantial property enhancement. However, by pre-mixing the TEGO with NR latex by an ultrasonically-assisted latex co-coagulation procedure followed by two-roll milling, the properties were improved substantially over the TEGO/NR nanocomposites mixed only on the mill. Quantitative analysis of TEM micrographs suggested the difference in properties was primarily the result of improved dispersion, as fewer multi-layer tactoids and platelets of overall smaller dimensions were observed in the nanocomposites pre-mixed by latex co-coagulation. NR filled with carbon black showed comparable property enhancement to TEGO/NR mixed on the two-roll mill but much smaller property changes than the latex pre-mixed TEGO/NR nanocomposites.
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Authors
Jeffrey R. Potts, Om Shankar, Shanthi Murali, Ling Du, Rodney S. Ruoff,