Published March 16, 2020 | Version Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Effects of zinc oxide filler on the curing and mechanical response of alkyd coatings

Abstract

The mechanical properties of an alkyd resin filled with zinc oxide pigment were studied at different concentrations over a wide range of time scales using dynamic mechanical analysis, quartz crystal rheometry and nanoindentation. The motivation for this work stems from the interest in accessing the long-term properties of paint coatings by studying the mechanical properties of historic paints. In this foundational work, we compare three different modalities of mechanical measurements and systematically determine the effect of pigment filler loading on the measured properties. Quantitative agreement between the methods is obtained when the characteristic time scales of each of the methods is taken into account. While nanoindentation is the technique most readily applied to historic paint samples, the rheometric quartz crystal microbalance (rheo-QCM) is the best suited for obtaining mechanistic information from measurements of paint properties over time, provided that appropriate thin-film samples can be produced. In these studies we find that ZnO increases the rate of oxidation of the alkyd during the initial stages of cure by an amount that depends on the ZnO content.

Additional Information

© 2020 Published by Elsevier. Received 5 December 2016, Revised 5 January 2020, Accepted 22 January 2020, Available online 7 February 2020. This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation, USA through the Division of Materials Research (DMR-1241667), the Office of International Science and Engineering, USA (OISE-1743748) and the Graduate Research Fellowship program, USA (DGE-1324585). The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Grainger Foundation are thanked for their support of scientific research at the Art Institute of Chicago. This work made use of the EPIC and SPID facilities of the NUANCE Center at Northwestern University, which has received support from the Soft and Hybrid Nanotechnology Experimental (SHyNE) Resource, USA (NSF NNCI-1542205); the MRSEC, USA program (NSF DMR-1121262) at the Materials Research Center; the International Institute for Nanotechnology (IIN); the Keck Foundation; and the State of Illinois, through the IIN. CRediT authorship contribution statement: Lauren F. Sturdy: Investigation, Formal analysis, Writing - original draft. Madeleine S. Wright: Investigation. Alexander Yee: Investigation. Francesca Casadio: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing. Katherine T. Faber: Conceptualization, Writing - review & editing. Kenneth R. Shull: Conceptualization, Supervision, Writing - review & editing.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
101182
DOI
10.1016/j.polymer.2020.122222
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20200207-102105047

Related works

Funding

NSF
DMR-1241667
NSF
OISE-1743748
NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
DGE-1324585
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Grainger Foundation
NSF
NNCI-1542205
NSF
DMR-1121262
International Institute for Nanotechnology (IIN)
W. M. Keck Foundation
State of Illinois

Dates

Created
2020-02-10
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-16
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