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The physical properties of bisphenol‐a‐based epoxy...
Journal article

The physical properties of bisphenol‐a‐based epoxy resins during and after curing. II. Creep behavior above and below the glass transition temperature

Abstract

Abstract The creep behavior of a series of fully cured epoxy resins with different crosslink densities was determined from the glassy compliance level to the equilibrium compliance J e at temperatures above T g and at the glassy level below T g during spontaneous densification at four aging temperatures, 4,4‐diamino diphenyl sulfone DDS was used to crosslink the epoxy resins. The shear creep compliance curves J(t) obtained with materials at equilibrium densities near and above T g were compared at their respective T g s. T g s from 101 to 205°C were observed for the epoxies which were based on the diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A. Creep rates were found to be the same at short times, and equilibrium compliances J e were close to the predictions of the kinetic theory of rubberlike elasticity. Time scale shift factors determined during physical aging were reduced to T g . At compliances below 2 × 10 −10 cm 2 /dyn, Andrade creep, where J(t) is a linear function of the cube root of creep time, was observed. The time to reach an equilibrium volume at T g was found to be longer for the epoxy resin with lower crosslink densities. The increase of density during curing is illustrated for the epoxy resin with the highest crosslink density.

Authors

Plazek DJ; Choy IC

Journal

Journal of Polymer Science Part B Polymer Physics, Vol. 27, No. 2, pp. 307–324

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 30, 1989

DOI

10.1002/polb.1989.090270207

ISSN

0887-6266

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