Microwave curing of epoxy-amine system - effect of curing agent on the rate enhancement

Citation
Fyc. Boey et al., Microwave curing of epoxy-amine system - effect of curing agent on the rate enhancement, POLYM TEST, 18(2), 1999, pp. 93-109
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Material Science & Engineering
Journal title
POLYMER TESTING
ISSN journal
01429418 → ACNP
Volume
18
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
93 - 109
Database
ISI
SICI code
0142-9418(1999)18:2<93:MCOES->2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Increasing application in the aerospace and microelectronics industries hav e led to the demand for accelerated curing of high performance structural a dhesive systems like epoxy. Particularly for the microelectronics industry, the curing of such thermoset systems have become the bottleneck of the who le production process. Alternative accelerated curing systems like Ultra Vi olet light, Gamma rays and Electron Beams have been limited by their respec tive disadvantages. More recently microwave curing has been shown to be a v iable alternative as an accelerated curing system. This paper investigates the effect of different curing agents in microwave curing for an epoxy syst em. Microwave radiation and thermal heating were performed on the epoxy Ara ldite GY6010, which is a resin of di-glycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA). The three types of curing agents used were 4,4'-Diamino-di-phenyl-sulfone (DDS), 4,4'Diamino-diphenyl-methane (DDM) and meta-Phenylene-diamine (mPDA) . Thermal cure temperatures were determined between the onset and midway to the peak temperature of the freshly prepared epoxy/amine systems of the DS C exotherm curves. Microwave curing of the epoxy/amine systems was carried out with a 1.1 kW variable power generator with a 2.45 GHz magnetron couple d to a multimodal cavity through a wave guide. Curing was done between 200 W and 600 W microwave, power. The curing was strongly dependent on the curi ng agent used. A low degree of cure at a relatively low microwave power was observed in DGEBA/DDS system, and has been attributed to the sluggish reac tion of DDS with epoxy, resulting in the entrapment of the functional group in the cross-link network. DDM and mPDA were more reactive than DDS and ga ve relatively faster full curing times than DDS. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.