Cargando…

Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning

Studies of the production of fiber-forming polyamide 6 (PA6)/graphene composite material and melt-spun textile fibers are scarce, but research to date reveals that achieving the high dispersion state of graphene is the main challenge to nanocomposite production. Considering the significant progress...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vasiljević, Jelena, Demšar, Andrej, Leskovšek, Mirjam, Simončič, Barbara, Čelan Korošin, Nataša, Jerman, Ivan, Šobak, Matic, Žitko, Gregor, Van de Velde, Nigel, Čolović, Marija
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32785048
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081787
_version_ 1783577324110741504
author Vasiljević, Jelena
Demšar, Andrej
Leskovšek, Mirjam
Simončič, Barbara
Čelan Korošin, Nataša
Jerman, Ivan
Šobak, Matic
Žitko, Gregor
Van de Velde, Nigel
Čolović, Marija
author_facet Vasiljević, Jelena
Demšar, Andrej
Leskovšek, Mirjam
Simončič, Barbara
Čelan Korošin, Nataša
Jerman, Ivan
Šobak, Matic
Žitko, Gregor
Van de Velde, Nigel
Čolović, Marija
author_sort Vasiljević, Jelena
collection PubMed
description Studies of the production of fiber-forming polyamide 6 (PA6)/graphene composite material and melt-spun textile fibers are scarce, but research to date reveals that achieving the high dispersion state of graphene is the main challenge to nanocomposite production. Considering the significant progress made in the industrial mass production of graphene nanoplatelets (GnPs), this study explored the feasibility of production of PA6/GnPs composite fibers using the commercially available few-layer GnPs. To this aim, the GnPs were pre-dispersed in molten ε-caprolactam at concentrations equal to 1 and 2 wt %, and incorporated into the PA6 matrix by the in situ water-catalyzed ring-opening polymerization of ε-caprolactam, which was followed by melt spinning. The results showed that the incorporated GnPs did not markedly influence the melting temperature of PA6 but affected the crystallization temperature, fiber bulk structure, crystallinity, and mechanical properties. Furthermore, GnPs increased the PA6 complex viscosity, which resulted in the need to adjust the parameters of melt spinning to enable continuous filament production. Although the incorporation of GnPs did not provide a reinforcing effect of PA6 fibers and reduced fiber tensile properties, the thermal stability of the PA6 fiber increased. The increased melt viscosity and graphene anti-dripping properties postponed melt dripping in the vertical flame spread test, which consequently prolonged burning within the samples.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7464262
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74642622020-09-04 Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning Vasiljević, Jelena Demšar, Andrej Leskovšek, Mirjam Simončič, Barbara Čelan Korošin, Nataša Jerman, Ivan Šobak, Matic Žitko, Gregor Van de Velde, Nigel Čolović, Marija Polymers (Basel) Article Studies of the production of fiber-forming polyamide 6 (PA6)/graphene composite material and melt-spun textile fibers are scarce, but research to date reveals that achieving the high dispersion state of graphene is the main challenge to nanocomposite production. Considering the significant progress made in the industrial mass production of graphene nanoplatelets (GnPs), this study explored the feasibility of production of PA6/GnPs composite fibers using the commercially available few-layer GnPs. To this aim, the GnPs were pre-dispersed in molten ε-caprolactam at concentrations equal to 1 and 2 wt %, and incorporated into the PA6 matrix by the in situ water-catalyzed ring-opening polymerization of ε-caprolactam, which was followed by melt spinning. The results showed that the incorporated GnPs did not markedly influence the melting temperature of PA6 but affected the crystallization temperature, fiber bulk structure, crystallinity, and mechanical properties. Furthermore, GnPs increased the PA6 complex viscosity, which resulted in the need to adjust the parameters of melt spinning to enable continuous filament production. Although the incorporation of GnPs did not provide a reinforcing effect of PA6 fibers and reduced fiber tensile properties, the thermal stability of the PA6 fiber increased. The increased melt viscosity and graphene anti-dripping properties postponed melt dripping in the vertical flame spread test, which consequently prolonged burning within the samples. MDPI 2020-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7464262/ /pubmed/32785048 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081787 Text en © 2020 by the authors. 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Vasiljević, Jelena
Demšar, Andrej
Leskovšek, Mirjam
Simončič, Barbara
Čelan Korošin, Nataša
Jerman, Ivan
Šobak, Matic
Žitko, Gregor
Van de Velde, Nigel
Čolović, Marija
Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title_full Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title_fullStr Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title_short Characterization of Polyamide 6/Multilayer Graphene Nanoplatelet Composite Textile Filaments Obtained Via In Situ Polymerization and Melt Spinning
title_sort characterization of polyamide 6/multilayer graphene nanoplatelet composite textile filaments obtained via in situ polymerization and melt spinning
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7464262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32785048
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12081787
work_keys_str_mv AT vasiljevicjelena characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT demsarandrej characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT leskovsekmirjam characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT simoncicbarbara characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT celankorosinnatasa characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT jermanivan characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT sobakmatic characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT zitkogregor characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT vandeveldenigel characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning
AT colovicmarija characterizationofpolyamide6multilayergraphenenanoplateletcompositetextilefilamentsobtainedviainsitupolymerizationandmeltspinning