Nanotitanium Dioxide Reinforced High Performance PEI/Silicone Rubber Composites: Mechanical, Thermal and Morphological Characteristics

2021 ◽  
Vol 37 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 179-188
Author(s):  
R.M. MISHRA ◽  
◽  
R. VIJAYVARGIYA ◽  
K.N. PANDEY ◽  
J.S.P. RAI ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Jianhua Li

Abstract Ceramifiable silicone rubber composites (CSR) are one of the most important industrially produced elastic technical materials. At present, there is a strong demand for CSR in the high-tech fields of high-speed rail, nuclear power, rocket and aerospace, which are still to be met. Many scholars have committed to the research work of improving the thermal stability, flame retardant, mechanical properties by changing the silicone rubber (SR) matrixes and filler, tremendous advances in CSR have been made for over the last decades where CSR intended for the high technology fields has evolved through different generations. In summary, the first-generation research is based on matrix reaction, the second-generation research is on reaction products, and the third-generation research is on fillers effects. In this review, the evolution of CSR and the synthesis routes, reaction mechanism, and degradation mechanism are introduced and analysed; fillers, various types of CSR based composites as well as the flame retardancy and mechanical properties are reviewed. Finally, the problems of developing high-performance CSRs are proposed and discussed. This review provides a theoretical basis and supporting data for the application of high-performance CSR, as well as provides details on the fire prevention mechanism of CSR.


1996 ◽  
Vol 199 (12) ◽  
pp. 2595-2604 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Law ◽  
R Blake

Fast-start escape performances for two species of threespine stickleback, Gasterosteus spp., were investigated using high-speed cinematography (400 Hz). The two fishes (not yet formally described, referred to here as benthic and limnetic) inhabit different niches within Paxton Lake, British Columbia, Canada, and are recent, morphologically distinct species. All escape responses observed for both species were double-bend C-type fast-starts. There were no significant differences between the species for any linear or angular parameter (pooled averages, both species: duration 0.048 s, distance 0.033 m, maximum velocity 1.10 m s-1, maximum acceleration 137 m s-2, maximum horizontal angular velocity 473.6 rad s-1 and maximum overall angular velocity 511.1 rad s-1). Benthics and limnetics have the greatest added mass (Ma) at 0.3 and 0.6 body lengths, respectively. The maximum Ma does not include the fins for benthics, but for limnetics the dorsal and anal fins contribute greatly to the maximum Ma. The deep, posteriorly placed fins of limnetics enable them to have a fast-start performance equivalent to that of the deeper-bodied benthics. Both the limnetic and benthic fishes have significantly higher escape fast-start velocities than their ancestral form, the anadromous threespine stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus, suggesting that the high performance of the Paxton Lake sticklebacks is an evolutionarily derived trait. In this biomechanical study of functional morphology, we demonstrate that similar high fast-start performance can be achieved by different suites of morphological characteristics and suggest that predation might be the selective force for the high escape performance in these two fishes.


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