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Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass

Polymer interlayer materials are utilized in laminated glass systems to provide increased resilience from blast incidents. The polymer chains within the interlayer material can benefit from material modifications that increase the crosslinking between adjacent chains. One theorized method of targete...

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Autores principales: Philipps, Joseph C., Gahl, John M., Salim, Hani A., Brockman, John D., Newberry, Michael C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10097281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37050286
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071672
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author Philipps, Joseph C.
Gahl, John M.
Salim, Hani A.
Brockman, John D.
Newberry, Michael C.
author_facet Philipps, Joseph C.
Gahl, John M.
Salim, Hani A.
Brockman, John D.
Newberry, Michael C.
author_sort Philipps, Joseph C.
collection PubMed
description Polymer interlayer materials are utilized in laminated glass systems to provide increased resilience from blast incidents. The polymer chains within the interlayer material can benefit from material modifications that increase the crosslinking between adjacent chains. One theorized method of targeted crosslinking is made possible through a boron neutron capture process. This process utilizes neutron radiation that bombards boron material, thus producing emissions of highly energetic particles into the polymer. The method has been experimentally utilized for bulk material processing as well as surface treatment. The surface treatment process has been extensively investigated in this study to manipulate polymers commonly used as interlayer material. Comparison evaluation tests have been completed to show the material behavior change through static tensile loading, dynamic tensile loading, indentation testing, and scratch resistance testing. Results present the specific material behavior changes, effects on different interlayer material, and optimizations for the treatment processes. Data resulting from these tests will expand the understanding of the material behavior changes from treatment techniques and show evidence of the expected crosslinking. This understanding will lead to a quantifiable application of system capacities to improve the future designs of the window and building systems and lead to a safer, more secure, and resilient infrastructure. Polymer treatment by boron neutron capture radiation has produced polymer interlayers with the potential of increased resilience to blast. The research to date has evaluated treated polymers and shown that the hardening and increased elasticity of the material can be initiated through treatment, thus indicating crosslinking behavior. These results show distinct changes in the material behavior, particularly with the EVA interlayer material. The harder surface of the interlayer may resist the cutting of the interlayer surface by glass shards. Scratch resistance was 30% higher and the measured hardness was 100% on treated surfaces. Treated EVA exhibited a 40% higher stress capacity, a 35% higher toughness, and a 40% increase in the elasticity of the material. The overall toughness increase of the treated polymer material allows for a higher energy absorption, and an overall improvement of window performance in blast conditions. The treatment technique can be applied to a variety of window interlayer products for optimal material performance in blast conditions.
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spelling pubmed-100972812023-04-13 Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass Philipps, Joseph C. Gahl, John M. Salim, Hani A. Brockman, John D. Newberry, Michael C. Polymers (Basel) Article Polymer interlayer materials are utilized in laminated glass systems to provide increased resilience from blast incidents. The polymer chains within the interlayer material can benefit from material modifications that increase the crosslinking between adjacent chains. One theorized method of targeted crosslinking is made possible through a boron neutron capture process. This process utilizes neutron radiation that bombards boron material, thus producing emissions of highly energetic particles into the polymer. The method has been experimentally utilized for bulk material processing as well as surface treatment. The surface treatment process has been extensively investigated in this study to manipulate polymers commonly used as interlayer material. Comparison evaluation tests have been completed to show the material behavior change through static tensile loading, dynamic tensile loading, indentation testing, and scratch resistance testing. Results present the specific material behavior changes, effects on different interlayer material, and optimizations for the treatment processes. Data resulting from these tests will expand the understanding of the material behavior changes from treatment techniques and show evidence of the expected crosslinking. This understanding will lead to a quantifiable application of system capacities to improve the future designs of the window and building systems and lead to a safer, more secure, and resilient infrastructure. Polymer treatment by boron neutron capture radiation has produced polymer interlayers with the potential of increased resilience to blast. The research to date has evaluated treated polymers and shown that the hardening and increased elasticity of the material can be initiated through treatment, thus indicating crosslinking behavior. These results show distinct changes in the material behavior, particularly with the EVA interlayer material. The harder surface of the interlayer may resist the cutting of the interlayer surface by glass shards. Scratch resistance was 30% higher and the measured hardness was 100% on treated surfaces. Treated EVA exhibited a 40% higher stress capacity, a 35% higher toughness, and a 40% increase in the elasticity of the material. The overall toughness increase of the treated polymer material allows for a higher energy absorption, and an overall improvement of window performance in blast conditions. The treatment technique can be applied to a variety of window interlayer products for optimal material performance in blast conditions. MDPI 2023-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC10097281/ /pubmed/37050286 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071672 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Philipps, Joseph C.
Gahl, John M.
Salim, Hani A.
Brockman, John D.
Newberry, Michael C.
Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title_full Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title_fullStr Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title_full_unstemmed Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title_short Polymeric Interlayer Strengthening with Boron Neutron Capture Radiation Treatment for Laminated Glass
title_sort polymeric interlayer strengthening with boron neutron capture radiation treatment for laminated glass
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10097281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37050286
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym15071672
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