Polymer, Vol.43, No.3, 803-812, 2002
Spatial gradients in particle reinforced polymers characterized by X-ray attenuation and laser confocal microscopy
The goal of this work is to develop techniques for measuring gradients in particle concentration within filled polymers, such as thermosetting polymer encapsulants. A high concentration of filler particles is added to such materials to tailor physical properties such as thermal expansion coefficient. Sedimentation and flow-induced migration of particles can produce concentration gradients that are most severe near boundaries. Therefore, techniques for measuring local particle concentration should be accurate near boundaries. Particle gradients in an alumina-filled epoxy resin are measured with a spatial resolution of 0.2 mm using an X-ray beam attenuation technique, but an artifact reduces accuracy near the specimen's edge. Local particle concentration near an edge can be measured more reliably using microscopy coupled with image analysis. This is illustrated by measuring concentration profiles of glass particles having 40 Pm median diameter using images acquired with a confocal laser fluorescence microscope. The mean of the measured profiles of volume fraction agrees to better than 3% with the expected value and the shape of the profiles agrees qualitatively with simple theory for sedimentation of monodisperse particles. Evidence that the microscopic method can be extended to smaller particles is provided by local concentration measurements on an epoxy polymer containing particles having diameters of the order of 1 mum.