We studied the frontal curing of trimethylolpropane triglycidyl ether (TMPTGE) using two BF 3 -amine initiators and two fillers, kaolin and fumed silica. In the case of kaolin, the range of concentrations allowing for frontal polymerization to propagate was dependent on its heat absorption effect whereas in the case of silica it was a consequence of the rheological features of this additive. However, for both systems the velocity and front temperature show the same trends; in all cases front velocities were on the order of 1 cm/min with front temperatures about 200 C.
The urease-catalyzed hydrolysis of urea displays feedback that results in a switch from acid (pH ~3) to base (pH ~9) after a controllable period of time (from 10 to >5000 s). Here we show that the spatially distributed reaction can support pH wave fronts propagating with a speed of the order of 0.1-1 mm min(-1). The experimental results were reproduced qualitatively in reaction-diffusion simulations including a Michaelis-Menten expression for the urease reaction with a bell-shaped rate-pH dependence. However, this model fails to predict that at lower enzyme concentrations, the unstirred reaction does not always support fronts when the well-stirred reaction still rapidly switches to high pH.
Thermal frontal polymerization was carried out with trimethylol propane triglycidyl ether using two different BF 3 -amine complexes, B-950 and B-110 from Leepoxy, as initiators for cationic polymerization. The amounts of filler (kaolin or fumed silica), defoaming, or expansion agents were varied to study how the compositions affected the front velocity, expansion, and flexural modulus of the resulting epoxy resins. The polymer produced with B-950 initiator showed higher modulus than the polymers produced with B-110. Moreover, fumed silica created stronger materials than kaolin. The presence of BYK as a defoamer or an expansion agent such as the Expancel #80 was also able to affect significantly the mechanical properties. differential scanning calorimetry studies indicated that the conversion was complete and that kaolin and silica increased the rate of reaction. V C 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 2014, 131, 40339.
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