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PRINCIPLES OF DIELECTROMETRY

 

RP026 - Cure Monitoring: A Comparison of Dielectric and Thermal Analysis
RP077 -
The Relation of Polymer Viscosity and Ion Viscosity
RP107 - Theory and Applications of Dielectric Analysis in Industry
RP104 -
In-Situ Characterizaation of Epoxy Polymerization Reactions by Microdielectric Analysis
RP075 -
Correlation of Viscosity and Conductivity Using a Free Volume Model
RP078 -
Rheological and Dielectric Changes During Isothermal Epoxy-Amine Cure
RP079 -
The Correlation Between Chain Segment and Ion Mobility in an Epoxy Resin System
RP080 -
The Effect of Stoichiometry on Chain Segment and Ion Mobility in Partially Polymerized Epoxy Systems
RP071 -
The Curing of Epoxy/Amine Systems Viewed Through Microdielectrometry
RP053 -
Microdielectrometry - a New Technique for Measuring the Viscosity of Polymers (in French)
RP094 -
Relaxation Processes in the Electrorheological Response
RP127 -
Dielectric and Thermal Cure Characterization of Resins Used in Pultrusion

 

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RP026 - Cure Monitoring: A Comparison of Dielectric and Thermal Analysis; Micromet Instruments, Inc., Dr. David R. Day and David D. Shepard

ABSTRACT

In the science of thermoset curing, which ranges from adhesives to complex composite structures, there is a constant need to monitor and analyze cure reactions. Wheras both thermal and dielectric analysis play a major role in laboratory analysis, dielectric analysis is best suited for in-process application. While dielectric analysis has been in use for over 50 years, only in recent years has the technology been advanced far enough to make in-process feasible. Microelectronic technology now enables the fabrication of integrated circuit dielectric sensors which are extremely sensitive and which function down to frequencies characteristic of mechanical measurements (less than 1 Hz.) The work presented in this paper was undertaken to investigate the relationship of the dielectric response to thermal response during curing of thermosetting resins.

Log conductivity data extracted from multifrequency loss factor data using microdielectric sensors exhibit changes long after heat of reaction data can be measured by thermal analysis. This most likely due to the long reaction times involved and the low amounts of heat produced at the end of cure. Changes in Tg as measured by thermal analysis and changes in log conductivity correlate well over the entire course of the cure.

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RP077 - The Relation of Polymer Viscosity and Ion Viscosity; Micromet Instruments, Inc., Dr. David R. Day

ABSTRACT

Dielectric sensors are now finding their way into various polymeric process environments to monitor electrical properties that are closely tied to mechanical properties of the material. One such relation is that between traditional mechanically measured viscosity (by cone and plate, by oscillating plates, or by spindle) and the Ion viscosity (derived from the dielectric Loss Factor.)

This relation arises from the fact that the Ion viscosity is really a measure of ion mobility, i.e., how easily ions (such as Na+ of Cl-) can move through the polymer system. This mobility is a function of polymer chain segment mobility and free volume. On the other hand, mechanical viscosity is a measure of how easily polymer chain segments can move past each other. This is also dependent upon chain segment mobility and free volume.

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RP107 - Theory and Applications of Dielectric Analysis in Industry, Micromet Instruments, Inc. Nathaniel Smith and David Shepard

ABSTRACT

In the past, dielectric analysis (DEA) has been used as an important measurement component in the overall analysis of polymer resins systems. Much of this work has been done at the research level in determining viscosity behavior, rate of cure, and cure endpoint. In the areas where DEA has been used in the production environment, it has been in the low volume applications of aerospace composites.

Within the last several years there has been an expansion of the applications where dielectric cure analysis has been used. This growth in the applications of dielectric cure analysis has expanded beyond the traditional areas of monitoring the cure of composites to include such applications as factory floor control of molding operations, monitoring resin synthesis, reduction and/or elimination of physical testing, diffusion monitoring, and SQC analysis. These applications and other techniques will be presented.

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RP104 - In-Situ Characterization of Epoxy Polymerization Reactions by Microdielectric Analysis., The Glidden Company, C.M.Neag, A.Rohn and D.Bode

ABSTRACT

Dielectric Analysis (DEA) techniques represent a group of convenient non-destructive tests that can be used to relate molecular motions observed in an electrical field to a variety of polymeric properties. Nearly all the published work in dielectric analysis has focused on solid materials or monitoring the crosslinking process in thermoset materials, especially epoxies. This work focuses on monitoring batch polymerization processes in-situ. The principle goals of this research center on correlating changes in the dielectric characteristics of a polymerizing epoxy polymer with changes in temperaturea and typically measured properties like viscosity, molecular weight and oxirane level.

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RP075 - Correlation of Viscosity and Conductivity Using a Free Volume Model, Georgia Institute of Technology, Joycelyn Simpson and Sue Ann Bidstrup

ABSTRACT

Viscosity and conductivity are measured over a 100C temperature range for a homologous series of non-curing epoxy resins. The free volume model successfully predicts the temperature dependence of viscosity and conductivity for these polymers. (This is the preliminary work for RP078, RP079, and RP080)

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RP078 - Rheological and Dielectric Changes During Isothermal Epoxy-Amine Cure, Georgia Institute of Technology, Joycelyn Simpson and Sue Ann Bidstrup

ABSTRACT

Dynamic viscosity and ionic conductivity have been measured simultaneously during the cure of a diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) epoxy resin with diamino-diphenyl sulfone (DDS) by mounting a microdielectric sensor into the plates of a rheometer. Two different cure temperatures were examined. Periodically, throughout the cure, samples were removed from the plates of the rheometer, quenched, and analysed for the glass transition temperature and epoxide conversion. The relationship between conductivity and viscosity appeared to be independent of cure temperature. A linear relation with a slope of -1 was observed between the natural logarithms of conductivity and viscosity during the cure up to approximately 85% cure conversion. It was hypothesized that the reaction rate was hindered by diffusion at this stage in the polymerization. A free volume relationship was used to successfully correlate conductivity with viscosity up to the diffusion limited region.

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RP079 - The Correlation Between Chain Segment and Ion Mobility in an Epoxy Resin System, Georgia Institute of Technology, Joycelyn Simpson and Sue Ann Bidstrup

ABSTRACT

Steady-sheer viscosity and ionic conductivity have been measured for nine commercial diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) epoxy resins with molecular weights ranging from 340 to 14,200. The temperature dependence of viscosity and ionic conductivity was modeled using free volume viscosity and ionic conductivity relationships, which correlate the fractional free volume required for polymer chain segment motion (B) and fractional free volume required for ion motion (B') with polymer structure. The fractional free volume required for polymer chain segment mobility was observed to increase systematically with the molecular weight of the resins. The fractional free volume required for ion mobility did not vary for the resin series. The stoichiometric mixture of a low molecular weight DGEBA resin and a 4,4'-diaminodiphenyl sulfone cross-linker was partially polymerized to extents of reaction ranging from 0% to 49%. The fractional free volume required for polymer segment mobility for these partially polymerized samples was consistent with results for the neat resins.

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RP080 - The Effect of Stoichiometry on Chain Segment and Ion Mobility in Partially Polymerized Epoxy Systems, Georgia Institute of Technology, Joycelyn Simpson and Sue Ann Bidstrup

ABSTRACT

The temperature dependence of steady-sheer viscosity and ionic conductivity were measured for a series of unreacted mixtures and partially cured, ungelled samples of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) and an amine cross-linking agent, diamino diphenyl sulfone (DDS). Six stoichiometric ratios of epoxide groups to amine hydrogens were examined. Free volume expressions were used to model the temperature dependence of the conductivity and viscosity for the unreacted DGEBA-DDS mixtures. In addition, these expressions were combined to successfully correlate changes in viscosity and conductivity during the DGEBA-DDS polymerization prior to gelation. It was also demonstrated that the change in weight average molecular weight during polymerization could be interpreted from the dielectric data. Through studying variations in the stoichiometry, it was possible to examine the effects of changes in chemical structure and ion concentration on the fitted parameters in the free volume models. The inherent ion transport factor was found to be inversely proportional to the concentration of ions in the test samples. The fractional free volume for segmental motion (B) was found to increase with an increase in the glass transition temperature and to be a function of the rigidity of the polymer.

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RP071 - - The Curing of Epoxy/Amine Systems Viewed Through Microdielectrometry; University of Lyon, C.Mathieu, G.Boiteux, G.Seytre, Laboratory of Macromolecular Materials, INSA, M.Feve, J.P.Pascault, Technical University of Lodz, Poland, J.Ulanski, and Aerospatiale, P.Dublineau

ABSTRACT

Aim of this article is to show how microdielectrometry can improve the curing of epoxy resins by detecting in real-time critical events like gelation or vitrification. The isothermal curing of DGEBA/3DCM in stoichiometric proportions is followed with: electrical techniques of microdielectrometry and DC measurements, analysis of insolubles, dynamic mechanical analysis and viscosimetry. Electrical techniques have evidenced their own efficiency to detect chemical phenomena with parameters sensitive to the modification of the system during the network formation.

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RP053 - Microdielectrometry - a New Technique for Measuring the Viscosity of Polymers; University of Liege, J.Denoel, J.M.Liegeois, P.Landuyt (this is a French language paper)

ABSTRACT

During the cure of thermosets in autoclaves, the final properties of the composite are directly conditionned by the evolution of the resin viscosity. Microdielectrometry, a new technique recently developed at M.I.T. is able to monitor the cure by measureing ionic viscosity which is proportional to mechanical viscosity measured by other means. This technique is successfully applied in other fields of study of polymers (R.I.M., thermoplastics, moisture absorption, aging, etc.) in the laboratory as well as in industrial production processes.

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RP094 - Relaxation Processes in the Electrorheological Response, P.Katsikupoulos and C.Zukoski, Dept. of Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois, Urbana

ABSTRACT

In this paper we report on studies of the frequency dependent behavior of the ER response. We find that insulated electrodes will produce an ER response when an oscillating electric field is applied. In DC fields no ER response is observed. The results reported here suggest that the stress transfer properties of ER suspensions can be altered both through variations of field strength and through frequency modulation.

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RP127 - Dielectric and Thermal Cure Characterization of Resins Used in Pultrusion, University of Mississippi, Reshma Shanku, James G. Vaughan, Jeffrey A. Roux

ABSTRACT

The ability to conduct on-line measurements of a resin's degree of cure is important to a pultruder for setting optimum pultrusion processing parameters. In this study, in-situ dielectric measurements were conducted to determine the degree of cure as a function of the pultrusion die axial position. Dielectric analysis utilizes a sensor which is inserted at the center of the impregnated fibers and travels along with the fibers through the heated die. The conductivity due to ionic movement in the resin is measured and a cure index is calculated from this data. The purpose of this study was to determine degrees of cure for pultruded epoxy/graphite, epoxy/glass and polyester/glass composites using dielectric measurements and to compare the on-line measured values with values obtained using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and with values predicted using a numerical heat transfer/chemical kinetic pultrusion model. A 2.54cm x 0.32cm profile was produced at a pull speed of 30.5cm/min for the epoxy composites and at 61cm/min for the polyester composite. DSC samples were taken from the composite close to the location of the embedded sensor to verify the values of degrees of cure obtained from the dielectric measurements.

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NETZSCH offers instruments for thermal analysis, thermal properties measurement, thermal hazard screening, and contract testing services. Our portfolio is the world's broadest, including a full range of dilatometers to measure high accuracy thermal expansion, classical DSC & TGA, high temperature DSC to 1650°C for specific heat, very high temperature STA (TGA-DSC/DTA) from sub-ambient to 2400°, thermal / evolved gas analysis with fully-integrated FTIR & MS, high resolution TMA and DMA, plus DEA - dielectric analysis for thermoset cure monitoring. We also feature leading-edge technology for thermal conductivity by guarded hot plate and heat flow meters, laser flash thermal diffusivity measurement, thermal hazard screening via adiabatic reaction calorimetry, as well as refractories testing including HMOR, CIC, and RUL. Finally, we offer advanced software packages including thermokinetics for process modeling and development.

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