Crystals and Fused Substance in Stretched Rubber. (A Preliminary Communication)

1936 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-54
Author(s):  
Peter A. Thiessen ◽  
Werner Wittstadt

Abstract When rubber is stretched, the arrangement of the molecules in the space lattice does not come to an end when the elongation is terminated, but continues for a certain time afterward. The final state of orientation for any elongation depends upon the temperature in the sense that within a wide temperature range there is at each temperature a definite ratio between the quantity of crystallized substance and the glass-like fused component. Within this temperature range, the proportion of crystallized substance diminishes with increase in temperature. This change is reversible, and the equilibrium is greatly influenced by the pressure. It may be considered as an established fact today that natural rubber is essentially a mixture of various polymers of an unsaturated hydrocarbon. At ordinary temperatures and in the absence of mechanical stress, it is an isotropic glass, both in the raw and vulcanized states. When deformed mechanically, particularly when stretched, it becomes anisotropic, a change which is evidenced by the appearance of an optical double refraction and an x-ray fiber diagram. This phenomenon is attributable to an orientation of the molecules in the direction of stretching and their arrangement into a space lattice which can be measured and defined accurately. The increase in double refraction as well as the clearness of the reflection interference pattern in the Roentgen diagram is proportional to the degree of elongation of both raw and vulcanized rubber, and it is reversible after a certain time of relaxation. In natural rubber, the reversibility of the phenomenon is disturbed by flow phenomena, which upon prolonged mechanical stress lead to permanent deformation. In well vulcanized rubber these phenomena are of little significance over a wide range of temperatures.

1939 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 736-754 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Thiessen ◽  
W. Wittstadt

Abstract An unsaturated hydrocarbon of the formula (C5H8)2x is the basis of natural rubber. Although there are still differences of opinion about the size of the molecules, it may nevertheless be accepted as fairly certain that the parent substance, the unsaturated hydrocarbon, is composed of a mixture of various steps of polymerization. At ordinary temperatures and under no mechanical stress, both vulcanized and unvulcanized rubber are isotropic glasses. Exposed to x-rays they give the diagram of an amorphous substance, i.e., a broad, diffuse ring. As a result of mechanical deformation, especially stretching, rubber becomes anisotropic. This anisotropy is manifest by the appearance of optical double refraction, as well as by an x-ray fiber diagram, which replaces the amorphous ring. This indicates orientation of the molecules and rearrangement into a space lattice, measurements of which have been made repeatedly and which make probable a rhombic structure.


1940 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. A. Thiessen ◽  
W. Kirch

Abstract Crystallization can be brought about in weakly vulcanized rubber by the method described by Thiessen and Kirsch for natural rubber. When samples of this type of vulcanized rubber were exposed to x-rays below + 6° C, but not under pressure, then Debye-Scherrer diagrams corresponding to those of a crystallized latex film were obtained. To determine the influence of pressure on these vulcanizates, samples were subjected to pressure on all sides in the chambers of the pressure apparatus described in the earlier work. After having been exposed for 100 days the sample which had been kept at + 6° C under 30 atmospheres' pressure showed a very marked Debye-Scherrer diagram, whereas samples kept at the same temperature but at normal pressure showed only the halo of an amorphous substance. Consequently pressure has an influence on the crystallization of vulcanized rubber as well as of raw rubber. The melting point of the crystalline phase lies between + 11° C. and +13° C. Obviously then an increase in pressure raises the temperature range of supercooling.


Author(s):  
Akila C. Thenuwara ◽  
Pralav P. Shetty ◽  
Neha Kondekar ◽  
Chuanlong Wang ◽  
Weiyang Li ◽  
...  

A new dual-salt liquid electrolyte is developed that enables the reversible operation of high-energy sodium-metal-based batteries over a wide range of temperatures down to −50 °C.


1959 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 739-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. R. Dunn ◽  
J. Scanlan

Abstract The thermal and photochemical aging of extracted dicumyl peroxide-, TMTD (sulfurless)- and santocure-vulcanized rubber, in presence of a number of metal and alkylammonium dithiocarbamates, has been investigated by measurements of stress relaxation. The dithiocarbamates have a considerable protective action upon the degradation of peroxide- and TMTD-vulcanizates, but they accelerate stress decay in santocure-accelerated vulcanizates. The reasons for this behavior are discussed. It is suggested that the excellent aging properties of unextracted TMTD vulcanizates are due to the presence of zinc dimethyldithiocarbamate formed during vulcanization.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (13-14) ◽  
pp. 1763-1786 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ganesh C. Basak ◽  
Abhijit Bandyopadhyay ◽  
Y. K. Bharadwaj ◽  
S. Sabharwal ◽  
Anil K. Bhowmick

1957 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 381-387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morton A. Golub

The shear dependence of viscosity of benzene solutions of natural rubber was studied at rates of shear from about 500 down to less than 1 sec.−1. Measurements involved following the change of pressure head with time of the various solutions flowing in a capillary, U-tube viscometer. Curvature in the plots of the logarithm of pressure head versus time indicated non-Newtonian flow. From such curves, reduced viscosity data over the above-mentioned shear range were readily derived. As a check, data over the range 100–500 sec.−1 were also obtained with a five-bulb viscometer of the Krigbaum–Flory type, and these data overlapped those obtained with the U tube. The reduced viscosity increased very sharply with decrease in gradient, making extrapolation to the viscosity axis quite unreliable. However, a theoretical relation proposed by Bueche fitted the composite data rather well. This work furnished a nice technique for determining the zero shear reduced viscosity (ηap/c)0 without the necessity of performing an uncertain extrapolation: evaluate the parameters of the Bueche formula which best satisfies the experimental data over a fairly wide range of shear rates, and then calculate (ηap/c)0 directly.


The crystalline morphologies that are attainable in samples of natural rubber (n. r.), by extending the samples prior to crystallization, are reviewed. Specimens covering the full range of crystalline morphologies possible have been prepared and tensile tested between – 120 and – 26 °C. The tensile behaviour of crystalline samples is compared and contrasted with that of oriented, but non-crystalline, identical natural rubber in the same temperature range. It is found that the tensile behaviour of semi-crystalline n. r. is dominated by the amorphous phase throughout the temperature range – 120 to – 26 °C. At temperatures above the glass transition temperature ( T g ) of the amorphous phase, the crystalline phase acts mainly as a diluent of the amorphous phase. At temperatures below T g , where the crystalline phase is set in a glassy matrix, it is found that the crystalline morphology does significantly affect the tensile behaviour. Attempts are made to differentiate the effects of crystallinity, crystalline morphology and orientation of the amorphous phase on the tensile properties of natural rubber.


1979 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 281-293
Author(s):  
MIKKO HARRI ◽  
ERNST FLOREY

1. Crayfish, Astacus leptodactylus, were acclimated to 12 °C and to 25 °C. Nerve muscle preparations (closer muscle of walking legs) were subjected to temperatures ranging from 6 to 32 °C. 2. The resting membrane potential of muscle fibres was found to increase with temperature in a linear manner, but with a change in slope at around 170 in cold-acclimated preparations, and around 24 °C in warm-acclimated ones. 3. Temperature acclimation shifted the temperature range of maximal amplitudes of fast and slow e.j.p.s toward the acclimation temperature. Optimal facilitation of slow e.j.p.s also occurred near the respective acclimation temperature. 4. E.j.p. decay time is nearly independent of temperature in the upper temperature range but increases steeply when the temperature falls below a critical range around 17 °C in preparations from cold-acclimated animals, and around 22 °C after acclimation to 25 °C. 5. Peak depolarizations reached by summating facilitated e.j.p.s are conspicuously independent of temperature over a wide range (slow and fast e.j.p.s of cold-acclimated preparations, fast e.j.p.s of warm-acclimated ones) which extends to higher temperatures after warm acclimation in the case of fast e.j.p.s. In warm-acclimated preparations the peak depolarization of slow e.j.p.s first falls then rises and falls again as the temperature increases from 8 to 32 °C. 6. Tension development elicited by stimulation of the slow axon at a given frequency reaches maximal values at the lower end of the temperature range in cold-acclimated preparations. The maximum is shifted towards 20 °C after warm acclimation. Fast contractions decline with temperature; possible acclimation effects are masked by the great lability of fast contractions in warm-acclimated preparations. 7. It is suggested that changes in the composition of membrane lipids may be responsible for the effects of acclimation on the electrical parameters and their characteristic temperature dependence.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (41) ◽  
pp. 11178-11183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Gao ◽  
Yao Cheng ◽  
Tao Hu ◽  
Zeliang Ji ◽  
Hang Lin ◽  
...  

This study highlights a highly sensitive dual-mode optical thermometer Pr3+:Gd2ZnTiO6 for thermal readings over a wide range of temperature.


1960 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 763-789
Author(s):  
J. Kruse ◽  
T. Timm

Abstract The temperature functions of the elastic modulus K2 and of the stress-optical constant K1 or its reciprocal 1/K1 were investigated for several elastomers. In the case of a hypothetical rubber which we have called “ideal” rubber—in analogy to gases—theory requires a direct proportionality between K2 or 1/K1 and the absolute temperature. The temperature functions of K2 and 1/K1 which we found by experiments with “real” elastomers show characteristic negative and positive deviations Δa2 and Δa1 from “ideal” values. When we put these values of Δa2 and Δa1 into a coordinate system, we find a certain orderly arrangement of the different elastomers, which allows us to picture a relationship between molecular structure and the values of Δa2 and Δa1. This brings up the possibility of explaining the experiments with the help of already known molecular-physical concepts. Although other explanations are conceivable the attempt is made to develop the simplest and most obvious ideas. It is conjectured that negative values of Δa2 and Δa1 come about from a loosening of secondary valence bonds—in certain ways, like crystal bonds— between neighboring molecules. Negative Δa1 values were found only in the crystallizable elastomers. It is further conjectured that positive values of Δa2 and Δa1 may result from the liberation by heat, of blocked, bulky molecular segments. These molecular segments can then contribute to the entropy elasticity only at higher temperatures. Positive Δa2 and Δa1 values are found chiefly in strongly crosslinked elastomers. Brief attention is given to the physical processes which are responsible for the elongation—double refraction and the entropy-elasticity. From this, it seems that the stress-optical constant and its temperature function are connected with properties of the molecular chains and on their orientability and crystallizability. The elastic modulus and its temperature function are strongly affected by the structure of the network and the molecular cohesive forces. Worthwhile hints about crystallization tendency, polarity and degree of symmetry of the different systems are given by the Δa1 and Δa2 values in the above mentioned coordinate systems. Natural rubber was tested in different recipes. The results of milling, of sulfur and accelerator additions, of time and temperature of vulcanization, on the values of K2, 1/K1, Δa2 and Δa1 were all investigated. The values of 1/K1 are at their highest level for dried latex films (unvulcanized). Milling and vulcanization, particularly the use of rather long periods and high temperatures, lower the value of 1/K1. A drop in the value of 1/K1, which regularly appears with a reduction of the negative Δa1 value, is explained as a loosening of secondary valence molecular couplings. According to this, natural rubber in the latex state is most strongly associated. According to this explanation, stretching in the unvulcanized condition is sufficient to loosen the secondary valence molecular bonds. Milling and vulcanization also act to loosen the linkages. Secondary valence bonds which are loosened by warming, as a general rule, are reestablished by prolonged cooling. It is to be supposed that the secondary valence molecular bonds under consideration are limited to small regions, somewhat comparable to the ordering in liquids. With an increasing degree of vulcanization, the Δa2 values go through a maximum which perhaps coincides with the condition of optimum vulcanization. This is explained as a maximum of the entropy-elasticity. In the case of slightly milled natural rubber which is appropriately vulcanized, the value of Δa2 can become practically zero. The change of the elastic modulus with temperature then is “ideal.” Nevertheless, no “ideal” rubber exists here, for Δa1 is less than zero.


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