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Effect of Silica and Mixing Time on Microstructures of Porous Polymer Composite by Emulsion Templating

DAVIN RHULE, ANIRBAN MONDAL, MRINAL C. SAHA, LAURA CUMMINGS, THOMAS ROBISON

Abstract


Porous polymer composite with tailored porosity is applied in the myriads of areas such as energy storage, oil/water absorption, bioengineering, and advanced areas of material science. The emulsion templating technology is one of the most popular methods for synthesizing porous polymer composite. It involves solidifying a two-phase mixture of porogen and polymer, then removing porogen to create pores within the continuous emulsion phase by polymerization or curing. The surfactant plays a pivotal role in accomplishing a stable emulsion, a key factor in designing the internal porous structure. This study highlights the effect of silica filler and mixing time on pore morphology, i.e., shape, size, and distribution. on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) porous structure utilizing the water-in-oil emulsion templating method. SpanĀ® 80 is used as a surfactant to reduce the surface tension between water, silica, and PDMS and simultaneously create a strong foaming effect. Different weight concentrations of silica (1-10 wt%) were chosen while keeping the internal phase, i.e., water (50 wt%) constant. The designed porous structures were further characterized through scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Porous composite specimens fabricated with higher silica content and mixing time consistently exhibit smaller pore sizes than specimens fabricated with lower mixing time and silica content. A breakthrough of pore morphology is seen at silica content higher than 5wt% at 1 min mixing, however, pore morphology drastically changes when mixing time increases from 1 min to 6 min. Variation of finer mixing time beyond 1 min shows stepwise changes in pore morphology from a large single-phase porous structure to a bi-modal porous structure which eventually become a smaller single-mode porous structure. Thus, the emulsion templating technique, in combination with different filler content and mixing time, will effectively aid in designing engineered porous polymer composite with varying stiffness and pore morphology.


DOI
10.12783/asc38/36668

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