Surface energy of EPDM, silicone rubber, and their 50 : 50 (by weight) blend during aging was determined by contact angle measurement using water and formamide as the probe liquids. The surface energy increases initially with aging time. The results are explained on the basis of the polar component
Accelerated hydrothermal weathering of silicone rubber, EPDM, and their blends
โ Scribed by S. Kole; S. K. Srivastava; D. K. Tripathy; A. K. Bhowmick
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 545 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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โฆ Synopsis
Hydrothermal weathering of the peroxide vulcanized specimens of silicone rubber, EPDM rubber, and their 50 : 50 blend carried out for various durations a t different temperatures reveals that silicone is very susceptible to degradation. For example, the modulus, the strength, and the elongation at break consistently fall with aging period. For 72 h of aging a t 210ยฐC, it practically loses its rubberiness (elongation < 50%); while EPDM and the 50 : 50 blend maintain more than 100% elongation at break during the times and temperatures. While hydrolytic chain scission is the main degradation mechanism for silicone, EPDM undergoes a predominantly crosslinking reaction. The kinetics study reveals that the better retention of properties of the blends over silicone is due to an increase in the activation energy of degradation in the presence of EPDM rubber, and this protection effect is higher in liquid-phase weathering than in steam-phase weathering.
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