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Mechanical and viscoelastic properties of novel resin-infused thermoplastic tri-block copolymer 3D glass fabric composites

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submitted on 2025-06-23, 09:08 and posted on 2025-06-26, 06:58 authored by F.H.A. Rahim, S.Z.H. Shah, P.S.M. Megat-Yusoff, S.M. Hussnain, R.S. Choudhry, M.Z. Hussain

The current study investigates the mechanical and viscoelastic properties of a novel acrylic resin-infused thermoplastic (Elium®) tri-block copolymer (Nanostrength®) 3D fibre-reinforced composites (FRCs). The toughened thermoplastic resins with three different concentrations of tri-block copolymer, i.e., 10 wt%, 15 wt%, and 20 wt%, were prepared and used to fabricate thermoplastic 3D-FRCs using a vacuum-assisted resin-infusion process at room temperature. The flexural, interlaminar, and viscoelastic properties and failure modes were evaluated and compared with those of pristine thermoplastic 3D-FRCs. The addition of tri-block copolymer significantly improves the flexural strength of 3D-FRC (up to 75 % and 34 % along the warp and fill directions, respectively, at 15 wt% of tri-block copolymer) and interlaminar shear strength (up to 80 % and 111 % along the warp and fill directions, respectively, at 20 wt% of tri-block copolymer). Additionally, the residual flexure and interlaminar shear strength improved up to 35 % and 109 % at 15 wt% of tri-block copolymer. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) demonstrated that the glass transition temperature and storage modulus of thermoplastic 3D-FRCs were increased up to 11°C and 24%, respectively at 20 wt% of tri-block copolymer, which may be due to increased physical crosslinking and the agglomeration of tri-block copolymer particles. The improved mechanical and viscoelastic properties of resin-infused thermoplastic tri-block copolymer 3D-FRCs are attributed to better interface adhesion, improved matrix toughness, and crack-bridging mechanisms induced by the tri-block copolymer. The toughened thermoplastic 3D-FRCs can be utilized in the design and development of composite structures for improved damage tolerance applications.

Other Information

Published in: Polymer Testing
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
See article on publisher's website: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.polymertesting.2024.108510

Funding

Universiti Teknologi PETRONAS Malaysia, (015LC0-351).

History

Language

  • English

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Year

  • 2024

License statement

This Item is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

Institution affiliated with

  • University of Doha for Science and Technology
  • College of Engineering and Technology - UDST