Discover Materials (Sep 2024)

Coating effect of polyurethane-layered double hydroxide nanocomposite on steel

  • Mona A. Ahmed,
  • Mostafa A. Shohide,
  • Ashraf M. El-Saeed,
  • Hamdy M. Naguib

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s43939-024-00109-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract The motivation behind this work is the preparation of polyurethane-magnesium aluminum layered double hydroxide (PU-LDH) nanocomposite and its application as a coating for steel protection. The coating was prepared with different doses of LDH, ranging from 0 to 2% of the coating weight. The effect of different concentrations on the mechanical, adhesion, and surface properties of PU coating is studied. Firstly, LDH was prepared via the coprecipitation process and then distributed in PU matrix. The nanocomposites were then crosslinked in the form of coating layers on steel. The preparation of the thermally stable crystalline LDH nanoparticles with 89 nm particle size was confirmed by FTIR, XRD, DLS, and TGA. SEM photos showed the dispersed and intercalated structure. The coating characteristics demonstrate that addition of LDH decreased the drying time and increased the dry film thickness of PU up to 1.5% due to the crosslinking between the large surface area nanofiller and polyurethane matrix. Furthermore, the prepared LDH nanofiller increased the adhesion strength, impact resistance, abrasion resistance, modulus, and flexibility of PU due to the strong polymeric network structure. The 2% nanocomposite coating shows poor properties due to the excess concentration and heterogeneous dispersion of nanoparticles within the PU polymer. The resistance to fire and some chemicals was supported by the thermally and physically stable LDH nanoclay. The former characterizations state that the proposed PU-LDH nanocomposite is an enhanced and applicable coating.

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