Effect of Tio Nanoparticles On Mechanical Properties of Epoxy-Resin System

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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015

ISSN 2091-2730

Effect of TiO2 nanoparticles on Mechanical Properties of Epoxy-Resin System


N.Annlin Bezy*, A.Lesly Fathima*
Research Department of Physics
*Holy Cross College (Autonomous), Nagercoil, TamilNadu
Email: annlinphysics@gmail.com

Abstract— Nanocomposites are new materials made with fillers having nanosize. The purpose of this study is to analyse the
mechanical properties of epoxy resin with titanium dioxide nanoparticles. In this present work, titanium dioxide nanoparticle is
prepared by sol gel method, using Titanium tetra isopropoxide and acetic acid. The synthesized Titanium dioxide nanoparticles are
characterized by XRD and the grain size in nanoscale is conformed. The sheets of neat epoxy resin and epoxy with addition of TiO 2
are primed by solution casting method. Mechanical studies of developed polymer sheets reveal much variation by incorporation of
TiO2. This is probably due to different dispersion of nanoparticles in epoxy resin.

Keywords— TTIP, Sol Gel method, Titanium dioxide, Solution Casting method, Epoxy, Nanocomposite

INTRODUCTION
In material research, the combination of an organic phase (generally polymers) with inorganic particles has drawn considerable
attention since last decades. Nano sized particles allow to improve the mechanical properties of polymer. Mechanical properties like,
yield stress, tensile strength and Young’s modulus generally suffer a huge increase when compared to pure polymers [1]. Nanosized
TiO2 is of particular interest in nanocomposites, because of their specifically size-related properties, non-toxicity, low cost and long
term stability [2].

The effective reinforcement by TiO2 nanoparticle of epoxy resins favoured in aerospace and other industries. Depending on the
dispersion and particles surface, several interfaces can be observed, which can result in special properties. Thus to attain maximum
performance from the TiO2 nanoparticles, uniform dispersion within the matrix must be ensured [3]. The intent of this study is to
understand the influence of TiO2 filler weight percentage on mechanical properties of epoxy incorporated TiO2 nanoparticles.

MATERIALS AND METHODS


Synthesis of TiO2 nanoparticles

TiO2 nanoparticle was prepared by a simple Sol gel method. Titanium Tetra Isopropoxide (TTIP) and Acetic acid were used
as the precursors. 1M of TTIP was added to 4M of acetic acid and this mixture was stirred for 1 hour in magnetic stirrer. To this
mixture double distilled water was added dropwise. While the addition of double distilled water this mixture transformed to white gel.
After aging of 24 hours, the gel was dried in an oven 200°C for 30 minutes. The solid crystals formed were powdered using agate
mortor. To induce transition from amorphous to anatase phase, this powder was annealed to the temperature 600°C in muffle furnace.
After calcinations the sample was finely powdered and was used for characterization [4].

Synthesis of pure epoxy and epoxy-TiO2 nanocomposites

In this study ARALDITE Epoxy resin (DBF 103) and hardener (HY- 951) were used to form pure epoxy and epoxy-TiO2
nanocomposites for different TiO2weight percentage (1wt %, 3wt %, 5wt %, 7wt %).

Preparation of pure epoxy sheet

Epoxy resin of 60gm and hardener of 6gm were poured separately in two beakers. To remove the air bubbles, both were need
to be ultrasonicated for 30 minutes. After the completion of this process, the hardener was added to the epoxy resin and it was mixed
by hand stirring. Finally it was ultrasonicated to remove air bubbles generated during the mixing process. After degassing, the mixture

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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015
ISSN 2091-2730

was poured into the metal mould. The metal mould was kept undisturbed for 1 hour at room temperature. Finally the sample was cured
by keeping the mould in an oven at 100°C for 2hours. Thus neat epoxy sheet was obtained.

Preparation of epoxy-TiO2 nanocomposite

The TiO2 fillers (nano) of 1 weight percentage were dispersed into 60gm of epoxy resin, and both were mixed by a high
speed mechanical stirrer (at 600 rpm) for 12 hours. It was then ultrasonicated to remove the air bubbles. After the completion of the
degassing process, the 6gm of hardener was added slowly into epoxy-filler with hand stirring. The mixture was again ultrasonicated
for 5 minutes to remove gas bubbles generated during the mixing process. After degassing, the mixture was poured into the metal
mould. Then the sample was cured by keeping the metal mould in an oven at 100°C for 2 hour. The same procedure was repeated for
3wt%, 5wt%, and 7wt%.

Pure Epoxy + Epoxy +


Epoxy + Epoxy +
Epoxy 1wt % TiO2 3wt % TiO2 5wt
% TiO2 7wt % TiO2

Fig-1 : Photograph of synthesized polymer sheets

CHARACTERIZATIONS AND RESULT

X Ray Diffraction

Powder XRD is used for crystal phase identification and estimation of the crystallite size for synthesized TiO 2 nanoparticle.
X-ray diffraction is performed using the XPERT-PROdiffractometer system (PW 3050) with automatic data acquisition using CuKα
radiation (λ = 1.54060Å) working at 40 kV/30 mA. The crystallite size D is calculated from XRD data using De-bye Scherrer’s
formula

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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015
ISSN 2091-2730

140
o
TiO2 at 300 C
120

Intensity (Counts)
100

80

60

40

20

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80

2 (Degree)

Fig-2: XRD pattern of TiO2 nanoparticles calcined at 300°C

350
(101)

o
300 TiO2 at 600 C
Intensity (Counts)

250

200

150
(200)
(103)

(105)
(211)

100
(204)
(004)

(220)
(215)
(116)

50

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

2 (Degree)

Fig-3: XRD pattern of TiO2 nanoparticles calcined at 600°C

The above two XRD patterns illustrate that TiO2 calcined at 300°C is in amorphous structure and annealed at 600°C be in
crystalline structure. It concludes that with the increase of temperature to 600°C the TiO 2 synthesized by sol gel method acquired
enhanced structure. The XRD data of TiO2 nanoparticles calcined at 600°C is given in table 1.

Table-1 : XRD data of TiO2 calcined at 600°C


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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015
ISSN 2091-2730

Angle 2θ Intensity
d- Spacing hkl
(Degree) (%)

25.357 100.00 3.50961 101

36.93 4.85 2.43224 103

37.90 24.41 2.37220 104

48.10 32.31 1.89025 200

53.97 21.82 1.69755 105

55.12 21.49 1.66489 211

62.69 16.95 1.48078 204

68.81 5.97 1.36319 116

70.27 7.74 1.33845 220

75.17 10.07 1.26293 215

The XRD of TiO2 nanoparticles calcined at 600°C are found to exhibit ten diffraction peaks and of that, (101) reflection
plane is very predominant. The crystallite size of TiO2 is calculated by De-Bye Scherrer formula. The crystallite size of synthesized
TiO2 is found to be 15.98nm and this confirms that the prepared TiO 2 particle is in nanoscale. The X-ray diffraction spectra confirm
that the pure TiO2 nanopowder is in anatase crystalline phase.

Mechanical Properties

The mechanical properties such as tensile strength, elongation at break, flexural strength, modulus, impact strength are
measured using a dynamic mechanical analyzer. Tensile test, Flexural strength and Impact test of developed sheets are performed
using mechanical analyzer in tensile mode in accordance with the ASTM D-3039 test standard, Flexural mode with ASTM D-790 test
standard, Izod impact mode with ASTM D-256 test standard respectively. Before testing, the rectangular samples of fixed size are cut
out from sheet using a clean razor blade and the upper side of cut sample for tensile test is polished to make flat surface. And the
edges of the sample are polished by sand paper of a mesh of 1200.

Tensile Test

A tensile test measures the resistance of a material to a static or slowly applied force. A machined specimen is placed in the
testing machine and load is applied. A strain gage or extensometer is used to measure elongation. The stress obtained at the highest
applied force is the Tensile Strength. The Yield Strength is the stress at which a prescribed amount of plastic deformation (commonly
0.2%) is produced. Elongation describes the extent to which the specimen stretched before fracture. Here, tensile test for all samples
are carried out on tensile tester as per ATSM D 3039 standard with different load cells. ASTM D3039 is a testing specification that
determines the in-plane tensile properties of polymer matrix composite materials reinforced by high-modulus fibres.

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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015
ISSN 2091-2730

800
Pure Epoxy

Tensile Stress (MPa)


600

400

200

0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6


Tensile Strain (%)

Fig-4 : Stress Vs Strain graph of pure epoxy

Epoxy + 1wt % TiO2 Epoxy + 3wt % TiO2


3500
2000
3000
Tensile Stress (MPa)

Tensile Stress (MPa)


2500 1500

2000
1000
1500

1000
500

500

0 0

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5
Tensile Strain (%) Tensile Strain (%)
3000 2500
Epoxy + 5wt % TiO2 Epoxy + 7wt % TiO2

2500
2000
Tensile Stress (MPa)

Tensile Stress (MPa)

2000
1500
1500

1000
1000

500
500

0 0

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
Tensile Strain (%) Tensile Strain (%)

Fig-5: Tensile stress Vs strain graph of TiO2 modified epoxy

Tensile modulus is calculated using the formula

( )
( )

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International Journal of Engineering Research and General Science Volume 3, Issue 5, September-October, 2015
ISSN 2091-2730

Table-2 : Tensile Properties


Ultimate
Maximum Yield Break Maximum
Elongation at Tensile
Sample Load Strength Strength Modulus
break (%) strength
(N) (MPa) (MPa) (GPa)
(MPa)
Pure 1.9335
825.09 4.10 1.4582 8.48838 2.0123
Epoxy (1.5-3.6)[6]
Epoxy +
1wt % 3,455.8 10.3417 2.8498 35.35057 20.0886 1.6584
TiO2
Epoxy +
3wt % 2,068.7 7.6536 1.3916 21.32218 12.1967 1.8048
TiO2
Epoxy +
5wt % 2,901.6 5.9775 1.8388 28.82103 17.4269 1.9069
TiO2
Epoxy +
7wt % 2,384.7 6.5103 1.7832 24.31754 13.1352 1.7630
TiO2

Stress - strain curves of pure epoxy, 1wt% 2wt% and 3wt% of TiO 2 – epoxy is shown in figure 4 and 5.

35

30
Tensile strength (MPa)

25

20

15

10

5
S1 S2 S3 S4 S5

Sample

Fig-6 : Variation of Tensile Strength

The tensile strength Vs sample graph is shown figure 6. Table 2 of tensile properties shows that the modified epoxy with 1wt
% TiO2 can withstands the load by 3,455.87N and this has maximum tensile strength. It is due to high dispersion of nanoparticles with
epoxy and amine hardner. The higher (3wt %, 5wt % and 7wt %) percentage loading of TiO 2 nanoparticles shows the inferior
properties compared to the 1wt% loading of TiO2 nanoparticles but still they are higher than the pure epoxy polymer. The reason for
this is explained as particle loading increases the resulting composites will begin to see more and more particle-to-particle interaction
rather than the intended particle-to-polymer interaction. Particle to- particle interaction will lead to agglomerated particles and reduced
mechanical properties [7]. This is reflects in the maximum load applied for the study. The modulus value of nanocomposite sample
increases with the weight percent of TiO2, but at 7wt % TiO2 it decreases due to higher occurrence of agglomeration under
gravitational interaction between TiO2 nanoparticles. On the other hand the low value of tensile strength is due to the formation of
chain entanglement in matrix system [5].

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Flexural Test

Flexure test measures the force required to bend a specimen under 3 point loading condition. Flexural modulus is a measure
of stiffness or rigidity and is calculated by dividing the change in stress by the change in strain at the beginning of the test. In this
study the flexural test is carried with standard procedures of ASTM D - 790. ASTM D 790 is a method of measuring the flexural
properties of a plastic by setting a test bar across two supports and pushing down in the middle until it breaks or bends a specified
distance. The obtained flexural properties of samples are tabulated below in table 3.

Table-3 : Flexural Properties

Ultimate
Maximum
Sample Flexural
Flexural Modulus (GPa)
strength (MPa)

Pure Epoxy 95.13 2.6262 (2.19)[7]

Epoxy + 1wt % TiO2 80.67 2.8726

Epoxy + 3wt % TiO2 57.84 2.8877

Epoxy + 5wt % TiO2 53.06 3.3819

Epoxy + 7wt % TiO2 78.21 3.2190

The result in table shows that there is a gradual increase in the flexural modulus and decrease in flexural strength.

100

90
Flexural strength (MPa)

80

70

60

50
S1 S2 S3 S4 S5

Samples

Fig-7 : Variation of flexural strength

The figure 7 is the graph of flexural strength Vs sample. For pure epoxy the flexural modulus has low value 2.6262GPa. The
flexural modulus is high with 3.3819GPa for 5wt % TiO2 added epoxy. TiO2 7wt % incorporated epoxy has maximum flexural
strength comparing with other modified epoxy, may be due to the plasticizing behaviour of TiO2 into epoxy [6].Thus there is a vast
increment in modulus value and shrink in flexural strength with addition of TiO 2 to 5wt %. Decrease flexural strength begin, where
increasing the addition of filler lead to increasing the constrained between polymer chains, decreasing the length of chains over certain
critical length. This lead to decreasing flexural strength which is depend on chain length, but flexural strength still higher for neat
epoxy resin because of van der waals bond which is weak bond but with huge numbers [8].

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Izod Impact test

Impact test is a measure of the resistance of material when an impact loading is applied. For this effort, Impact strength is
determined from Izod impact strength test. It is performed by the procedures of ASTM D 256 standard. It is used for the
determination of the resistance of plastics to "standardized" pendulum-type hammers, mounted in "standardized" machines, in
breaking standard specimens with one pendulum swing. The standard test for this method requires specimens made with a milled
notch. The acquired impact values are noted below in table 4.

Table-4 : Impact Strength Fig-8 : Impact strength of various samples

Impact Strength
Sample
9
kJ/m2
8
Pure Epoxy 6.0
Impact Strength (KJ/m2)

6
Epoxy + 1wt % TiO2 2.0
5

4 Epoxy + 3wt % TiO2 7.9


3
Epoxy + 5wt % TiO2 6.86
2

1
S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 Epoxy + 7wt % TiO2 8.34
Samples

The graph for Impact strength Vs samples is shown in figure 8. Impact strength graph specifies that for pure epoxy the
strength is high. When epoxy is modified by TiO2 nanoparticle of different weight percentage the impact value significantly increases
with improvement in TiO2 mass. The 7wt % TiO2 added epoxy has high impact strength, shows mechanically it has high strength.

CONCLUSION
In this study the TiO2 nanoparticles were prepared by sol gel method, and annealed at 300°C and 600°C for 1 h. The structure of
the prepared nanopowders has been analyzed by X-ray diffraction technique. TiO2 synthesized at 600°C shows anatase phase. The
polymer samples were prepared by solution casting method. The pure epoxy, epoxy + 1wt % TiO2, epoxy + 3wt % TiO2, epoxy + 5wt
% TiO2 and epoxy + 7wt % TiO2 were the developed composites. The effect of particle dispersion situation on the mechanical
properties of nanocomposites has been studied. Tensile strength of epoxy with 1wt % TiO2 nanoparticle has maximum attainment. The
flexural strength of pure epoxy and 7wt % TiO2 added epoxy has enhanced value because of plasticizing behaviour of TiO2 into epoxy
respectively. The impact strength of 1wt % incorporated epoxy is found to be very low and it increases by increasing the amount of
TiO2. Finally, mechanical studies showed that epoxy with the addition of TiO2 nanoparticles have certain influence on the mechanical
properties.

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