# Improvement of Flame Retardancy on Polyamide 6 Composites via Melamine Polyphosphate-Modified Carbon Nanotubes

**Authors:** Xuejun Shi, Xiangxiang Du, Xiaodong Zhao, Meiying Wang, Quanshuai Liu, Bo Hong, Yongjun Han, Haoxuan Sun, Wei Yuan

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/polym18050643 · Polymers · 2026-03-06

## TL;DR

This paper shows how attaching a flame retardant to carbon nanotubes improves the fire resistance of polyamide 6 without causing leakage issues.

## Contribution

A new method of grafting melamine polyphosphate onto carbon nanotubes to enhance flame retardancy in polyamide 6 composites.

## Key findings

- Flame-retardant-modified carbon nanotubes achieved UL 94 V-2 rating at 10 wt% loading.
- The limiting oxygen index increased from 24.5% to 29.1% with the modified composites.
- Peak heat release rate decreased from 750 kW/m² to 614 kW/m² in the modified composites.

## Abstract

Melamine polyphosphate (MPP) is a widely employed additive-type flame retardant for polyamide 6. Generally, a higher loading of MPP leads to improved flame retardancy of polyamide 6 composites. Nevertheless, excessive addition tends to cause problems such as flame-retardant migration, leakage, and exudation. Against this background, this work focuses on covalently grafting melamine polyphosphate onto the surface of carbon nanotubes via a facile chemical reaction, with the aim of alleviating the migration and leakage of the flame retardant in the polyamide 6 matrix. Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) were surface modified with a silane coupling agent (KH560) to obtain CNTs bearing epoxy groups (CNT-KH560). Subsequently, a ring-opening addition reaction was conducted between the CNT-KH560 and melamine polyphosphate (MPP) yielding carbon nanotubes with surface-bonded flame-retardant MPP (CNTM). Polyamide 6 composite slices (PA6/CNTM) were prepared via twin-screw extrusion blending and compounding and then by hot-press molding into test specimens. The modified carbon nanotubes were characterized using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis. The results confirmed the successful grafting of MPP onto the carbon nanotube surface, with a grafting degree of 9.1 g/100 g measured. The flame retardancy of the PA6/CNTM composites were evaluated through UL 94 vertical burning and limiting oxygen index (LOI) tests and cone calorimeter. These flame retardancy results indicated that when the content of flame-retardant-modified carbon nanotubes was 10 wt%, the PA6/CNTM10 composites achieved UL 94 V-2 and the limiting oxygen index increased from 24.5% of pure PA6 to 29.1%. The PHRR value of pure PA6 decreased from 750 kW/m2 to 614 kW/m2. This design of surface-grafted flame retardant provides a new strategy for the preparation and application of high-performance polyamide 6 flame-retardant composites.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100), silane (MESH:D012821), CNTM (-), Polyamide 6 (MESH:C009916), CNTs (MESH:D037742), epoxy (MESH:D004853)

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987075/full.md

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987075/full.md

## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987075/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987075