Biocomposites from Natural Rubber: Synergistic Effects of Functionalized Cellulose Nanocrystals as Both Reinforcing and Cross-Linking Agents via Free-Radical Thiol–ene Chemistry

2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (30) ◽  
pp. 16303-16310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bipinbal Parambath Kanoth ◽  
Mauro Claudino ◽  
Mats Johansson ◽  
Lars A. Berglund ◽  
Qi Zhou
Materials ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1992 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexey Kondyurin ◽  
Anastasia Eliseeva ◽  
Alexander Svistkov

A model of rubber with a cross-linked rubber layer on a carbon black filler has been proposed. The cross-links are the result of free radical reactions generated by carbon atoms with unpaired electrons at the edge of graphitic sheets in a carbon black filler. The experimental study of the cross-linking reactions in polyisoprene was done on a flat carbonized surface after ion beam implantation. The cross-linking process in the polyisoprene macromolecules between two particles was simulated. The model with a cross-linked rubber layer on a carbon filler as a “glassy layer” explains the mechanical properties of the rubber materials.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Kazi Md Zakir Hossain ◽  
Nashid Sharif ◽  
N. C. Dafader ◽  
M. E. Haque ◽  
A. M. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury

A range of radiation vulcanised natural rubber latex (RVNRL) films were prepared using various concentrations of aqueous extracts of mature Diospyros peregrina fruit, which acted as a cross-linking agent. The surface of the RVNRL films exhibited an aggregated morphology of the rubber hydrocarbon with increasing roughness due to increasing fruit extract contents in the latex. An improvement in tensile strength, tensile modulus, and storage modulus of RVNRL films was observed with the addition of fruit extracts compared to the control film due to their cross-linking effect. The glass transition (Tg) temperature of all the RVNRL films was found to be at around −61.5°C. The films were also observed to be thermally stable up to 325°C, while the maximum decomposition temperature appeared at around 375°C. The incorporation of fruit extracts further revealed a significant influence on increasing the crystallinity, gel content, and physical cross-link density of the RVNRL films.


1951 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 777-786
Author(s):  
E. H. Farmer ◽  
C. G. Moore

Abstract The high degree of dehydrogenation effected by tert.-butoxy radicals at the α-methylenic groups of olefins enables these radicals to be used for the carbon-to-carbon cross-linking of unsaturated carbon chains, and especially of the polyisoprenic chains of natural rubber. Such cross-linking amounts to a vulcanization process in which the connecting links between chain molecules are just C—C bonds, which may be expected to have appropriate attributes. An examination has first been made of the cross-linking produced by tert.- butoxy radicals (from di-tert.-butyl peroxide) at 140° between the short iso-prenic chains in 1-methylcyclohexene, 4-methylhept-3-ene, 2,6-dimethylocta-2, 6-diene, and digeranyl. Cross-linking proceeds efficiently in each case, and the points of union in these isoprene units which become directly joined are not confined to original α-methylenic carbon atoms. Where the reagent radicals are in considerable deficit, e.g., one per two or three of the isoprene units present, those olefin molecules which are attacked become linked together mostly by single unions to form aggregates containing two, three or four molecules; but in the tetraisoprenic olefins the extent to which more than one union is formed between some of the directly linked molecules becomes appreciable. In natural rubber, cross-linking occurs smoothly and to nearly the full extent corresponding to the (in practice restricted) proportion of peroxidic reagent employed. Good vulcanizates can be so obtained in which the tensile stength is found to increase towards a maximum and then to decline rapidly as the degree of cross-linking steadily increases. Thus to obtain vulcanizates of the optimum physical characteristics, the degree of cross-linking must be suitably chosen. The role of the peroxidic reagent is almost entirely non-additive and non-degradative.


2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 263-270
Author(s):  
AISWARYA R. NAIR ◽  
◽  
SREEDHA SAMBHUDEVAN ◽  
BALAKRISHNAN SHANKAR ◽  
◽  
...  

1972 ◽  
Vol 45 (5) ◽  
pp. 1388-1402 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. A. Wood ◽  
G. W. Bullman ◽  
G. E. Decker

Abstract Natural rubber mixed with varying amounts of dicumyl peroxide are crosslinked by heating 120 min at 149° C. The quantitative measure of cross- linking was taken as the amount fp of decomposed dicumyl peroxide, the product of p, the number of parts added per hundred of rubber and f the fraction decomposed during the time of cure. The shear creep modulus G was calculated from measurements of the indentation of a flat rubber sheet by a rigid sphere. The glass transition temperature Tg, was raised about 1.2° C for each part of decomposed dicumyl peroxide. Above (Tg+12) the modulustemperature relations were linear with a slope that increased with increasing crosslinking. The creep rate was negligible except near the glass transition and at low values of fp. Values of G, read from these plots at seven temperatures, were plotted as a function of fp. The linearity of the two plots permits the derivation of the general relation: G=S(fp+B)T+H(fp+B)+A where A, B, H, and S are constants. The lines representing G as a function of fp at each temperature all intersected near the point, fp=0.45 phr, G=2.70 Mdyn cm−2(0.270 MN  m−2). . The constants were evaluated as A=2.70 Mdyn cm−2,B=−0.45 phr, S=5.925×10−3 Mdyn cm−2(phr)−1 K−1 and H=0.0684(Mdyn cm−2) (phr)−1. This equation represented satisfactorily all the data obtained at temperatures from —50 to +100° C for values of fp from about 1 to 24 phr.


2013 ◽  
Vol 46 (15) ◽  
pp. 5831-5841 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Lattuada ◽  
Emanuela Del Gado ◽  
Tiziana Abete ◽  
Lucilla de Arcangelis ◽  
Stefano Lazzari ◽  
...  

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