Titanium carbide ceramic nanocrystals to enhance the physicochemical properties of natural rubber composites
The mechanical strength of natural rubber (NR) was enhanced by incorporating novel titanium carbide (TiC) nanocrystals as a filling material. The rubber nanocomposites were prepared through mixing TiC nanoparticles with NR latex and the resulting NR/TiC masterbatch was further mixed at the solid sta...
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Veröffentlicht in: | RSC advances 2020-05, Vol.1 (33), p.1929-19299 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The mechanical strength of natural rubber (NR) was enhanced by incorporating novel titanium carbide (TiC) nanocrystals as a filling material. The rubber nanocomposites were prepared through mixing TiC nanoparticles with NR latex and the resulting NR/TiC masterbatch was further mixed at the solid stage with other chemicals
via
internal mixing. The final rubber composites prepared using TiC as the nanofiller were denoted as NR/TiC-0, NR/TiC-0.5, NR/TiC-1.0, NR/TiC-2.5, and NR/TiC-5.0; moreover, a comparative study was conducted using carbon black (CB-330) as the filler and the composites were denoted as NR/CB-1.0 and NR/CB-5.0. As per the results of tensile tests, the NR/TiC-1.0 composite revealed the highest tensile value of 31.13 MPa and this indicated improvement by 92% compared to that of the control (NR/TiC-0 (16.22 MPa)); moreover, it indicated improvements by 73% and 63% compared to the values of NR/CB-1.0 and NR/CB-5.0, respectively. Moreover, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis revealed a better dispersion of the NR/TiC-1.0 composite compared to the other composites. Furthermore, dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) was conducted to observe the energy storage and loss properties at dynamic conditions; the results revealed that the highest storage peak and lowest loss peak were observed for the NR/TiC-1.0 composite. Also, thermogravimetric analysis revealed the superior thermal stability of the NR/TiC-1.0 composite to that of the others at the NR degradation temperature of around 400 °C. Importantly, the curing time (
t
90
) of NR/TiC-1.0 was reduced considerably compared to that of the other composites even the NR/CB composites, which would be beneficial for industries to save energy at the curing stages of tire-like applications. The improvements were significant when compared to the industrially well-known NR/CB composites and well above the industrially required minimum parameters of the tire industry. Ultimately, this will open up a distinct avenue for natural rubber reinforcement.
The mechanical strength of natural rubber (NR) was enhanced by incorporating novel titanium carbide (TiC) nanocrystals as a filling material. |
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ISSN: | 2046-2069 2046-2069 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d0ra01943g |