Type II waterborne epoxy systems are based on solid epoxy resins in the form of uniform aqueous dispersions containing co-solvents and stabilized by emulsifiers. These systems can be prepared by direct emulsification involving dispersion of epoxy resin (a solution in co-solvent) in water using an emulsifying agent (surfactant). These systems can also be prepared by an inversion process, in which water is added to a liquid resin to form first a water-in-oil emulsion that subsequently is inverted to an oil-in-water emulsion upon addition of a further quantity of water. The inversion technique is preferred, as it gives a more stable emulsion with a small particle size and narrow particle size distribution. Just prior to application, hardener is added and emulsified into the resin emulsion. The pot life is longer than type I due to the high epoxy equivalent weight and difficulty of hardener diffusion into the particles. After application, as dispersion particles coalesce, resin and hardeners interdiffuse and curing takes place. However, there is a greater tendency for such films to develop a heterogeneous morphology (due to improper diffusion of hardener) with epoxy-rich and amine-rich domains.
Emulsified systems (type II)
17 октября, 2015 Pokraskin