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Synthesis of a Bisbenzylideneacetone-Containing Benzoxazine and Its Photo- and Thermally Cured Thermoset
Author(s) -
Ching Hsuan Lin,
Zih Jyun Chen,
Chien-Han Chen,
Meng Wei Wang,
Tzong Yuan Juang
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.7b00573
Subject(s) - curing (chemistry) , thermosetting polymer , thermal stability , differential scanning calorimetry , polymer chemistry , materials science , bisphenol a , aniline , acetone , chemistry , organic chemistry , epoxy , physics , thermodynamics
A bis(4-hydroxybenzylidene)acetone/aniline-based benzoxazine ( BHBA-a ) was prepared from a bisbenzylidene-containing bisphenol, bis(4-hydroxybenzylidene)acetone ( BHBA ), aniline, and paraformaldehyde through Mannich condensation in a cosolvent of toluene/ethanol (2:1, v/v). The structure of BHBA-a was successfully confirmed by Fourier transform infrared and 1 H and 13 C NMR spectra. According to the differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) thermogram of BHBA , an immediate exothermic peak after the melting peak was observed, suggesting that BHBA is thermally active. NMR data of thermally treated BHBA confirm that the immediate exothermic peak after melting of BHBA in the DSC thermogram is resulted from the curing of a double bond. UV and 1 H NMR spectra of BHBA-a show that the bisbenzylideneacetone moiety underwent dimerization through the [2π + 2π] cycloaddition. Therefore, two procedures were applied to cure BHBA-a . The first one was thermal curing of the double bond of bisbenzylideneacetone and oxazine moieties. The second one was photocuring of the bisbenzylideneacetone moiety, followed by thermal curing of the oxazine moiety. The thermal properties of thermosets were evaluated based on these two procedures. Thermosets of BHBA-a exhibit T g as high as 318 °C for curing procedure 1 and 342 °C for curing procedure 2. These values are much higher than that of a traditional bisphenol/aniline-based benzoxazine thermoset. We conclude that the thermal curing of the double bond of bisbenzylideneacetone and photodimerization of bisbenzylideneacetone contributes to the good thermal properties.

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