Nanomaterials
derived from metal–organic frameworks (MOFs)
are highly promising as future flame retardants for polymeric materials.
The precise control of the interface for polymer nanocomposites is
taking scientific research by storm, whereas such investigations for
MOF-based nanofillers are rare. Herein, a novel yolk-double shell
nanostructure (ZIF-67@layered double hydroxides@polyphophazenes, ZIF@LDH@PZS)
was subtly designed and introduced into epoxy resin (EP) as a flame
retardant to fill the vacancy of yolk/shell construction in the field.
Meanwhile, the interface of the polymer nanocomposites can be further
accurately tailored by the outermost layer of the nanofillers from
PZS to Ni(OH)2 (NH), by which hollow nanocages with treble
shells (LDH@PZS@NH) were obtained. It is remarkably interesting that
LDH@PZS@NH endows the EP with the lowest peak of heat release rate
in the cone calorimeter test, but the total heat and smoke releases
(THR and TSP) of the nanocomposites are even higher than those of
the neat polymer. In contrast, EP blended with ZIF@LDH@PZS shows outstanding
comprehensive performance: with 2 wt.%, the limiting oxygen index
is increased to 29.5%, and the peak heat release rate is reduced by
26.0%. The impact and flexural strengths are slightly lowered, while
the storage modulus is enhanced remarkably compared with that for
neat EP. The flame retardant mechanism is systematically explored
focusing on the interfacial interactions of different hybrids within
the epoxy matrix, ushering in a new stage of study of nanostructural
design-guided interface manipulation in MOF-based polymer nanocomposites.