Abstract
There are strong reasons to believe that on heating a crosslinked rubber crosslinks are broken and new ones formed. This has been established by the well-known work on stress relaxation of Tobolsky and his school, and others. In the following we will discuss some experiments which give further support to these views, both of a qualitative and quantitative nature. In the first place, we carried out a few preliminary experiments on stress relaxation at elevated temperatures. This stress relaxation may be due to either or both of two effects : (a) a displacement of the crosslinks, (b) a change in the number of crosslinks per unit of volume (crosslinking density p). A measure of ρ can be obtained from the equilibrium degree of swelling at room temperature, and this gives us a means of comparing changes of ρ in a stretched sample with those occurring in the unstretched state. To this end commercial rubber strips were heated in the stretched state in the absence of oxygen at three different temperatures (80, 106, 122° C) for times varying from 2 to 72 hours. The degree of stretch, i.e., the length of the stretched rubber divided by the original length was α=1 (unstretched) in one series, and α=3 in a second series. The initial stress τ0 (for α=3) and the final stress τ at the end of the heating period were read from the stress-strain diagrams, taking into account that for the heat-treated strips there was a permanent set. In other words, τ is the stress needed to give the heat-treated sample at room temperature a length 3 times the length of the original untreated sample; the ratio τ/τ0 is therefore essentially the ratio between the moduli of elasticity. The cross-linking densities ρ0 and ρ before and after heating were derived from swelling experiments (for details see the sections on swelling).