Unravelling the effect of healing conditions and vulcanizing additives on the healing performance of rubber networks

Self-healing rubbers have steadily been growing during the last decades. Various strategies have been studied to transform the vulcanized rubber into a reversible cross-linked network with multiple repair cycles. However, a detailed description on how the chemical constituents of a rubber formulatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Polymer (Guilford) 2022-01, Vol.238, p.124399, Article 124399
Hauptverfasser: Araujo-Morera, Javier, López-Manchado, Miguel A., Verdejo, R., Hernández Santana, Marianella
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container_start_page 124399
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creator Araujo-Morera, Javier
López-Manchado, Miguel A.
Verdejo, R.
Hernández Santana, Marianella
description Self-healing rubbers have steadily been growing during the last decades. Various strategies have been studied to transform the vulcanized rubber into a reversible cross-linked network with multiple repair cycles. However, a detailed description on how the chemical constituents of a rubber formulation affect the healing properties of the vulcanizate is unknown and has not been reported until now. In this research, the individual effects of both the curing agent (sulfur and peroxide) and the activating complex (zinc oxide and stearic acid) have been assessed on the healing capability of a styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) compound. The analysis of different healing conditions revealed that pristine materials should be subjected to the same thermal treatment as the healed samples to obtain scientifically sound values of the healing efficiency. Results also showed that each component affected the healing at different time scales, with the activating complex being responsible for the initial physical healing stage. Meanwhile, sulfur would act at later stages as dynamic healing moiety, enabling disulfide exchange reactions. In conclusion, the mechanical recovery of a rubber network can be potentially tailored depending on the relation between the chemical components of the rubber formulation. [Display omitted] •Vulcanization additives affect the healing capability of a SBR compound.•Zinc oxide and stearic acid favor chain entanglements and interdiffusion.•Sulfur promotes healing through disulfide exchange reactions.•Optimal sulfur content (1 phr) results in a healing efficiency of 80%.•SBR compound exhibits a repeatable healing after multiple cycles.
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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Additives
Butadiene
Curing agents
Elastomer
Heat treatment
Rubber
Self-healing
Stearic acid
Styrene
Styrene-butadiene rubber
Sulfur
Vulcanization
Zinc oxide
title Unravelling the effect of healing conditions and vulcanizing additives on the healing performance of rubber networks
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