The mechanical behavior of glass fiber–reinforced, glass bubble–filled epoxy composites in a moisture-rich environment is a critical area of study, especially for applications in marine, automotive, aerospace, and structural components where lightweight and durability are key. Here’s a breakdown of the core aspects:

Mechanical Behavior Changes Due to Moisture

1. Moisture Absorption Mechanism

  • Epoxy absorbs water through diffusion.
  • Water acts as a plasticizer, reducing glass transition temperature (Tg).
  • Interfacial degradation between epoxy–glass fiber and epoxy–glass bubble interfaces.

2. Influencing Factors

  • Glass fiber orientation and content: More fibers improve mechanical retention under wet conditions.
  • Glass bubble volume fraction: Higher GB content = lower density but more moisture-sensitive.
  • Void content and GB integrity: Defective bubbles or poor dispersion can create micro-cracks or moisture paths.
  • Surface treatments: Silane treatments on GBs and sizing agents on GF can reduce moisture ingress.

Conditioning & Testing Protocols

  1. Immersion in water or salt solution (NaCl) at room temperature or elevated temps (e.g., 60–90°C).
  2. Moisture uptake measurement via weight gain over time.
  3. Mechanical testing after various immersion durations (24h to 1000+ hours).
  4. Use of Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) to inspect fracture surfaces.

Mitigation Strategies

  • Use hydrophobic epoxy systems.
  • Surface-modify GBs and GF with silane coupling agents.
  • Add nanofillers (e.g., nanoclays, graphene) to reduce permeability.
  • Apply moisture-resistant coatings to final composite parts.

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