Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent

The effect of carbon black on the mechanical properties of elastomers is of great interest, because the filler is one of principal ingredients for the manufacturing of rubber products. While fillers can be used to enhance the properties of elastomers, including stress-free swelling resistance in sol...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ch'ng, S.Y., Andriyana, A., Tee, Y.L., Verron, E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Materials 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/13751/1/Effects_of_Carbon_Black_and_the_Presence_of_Static.pdf
_version_ 1796946630116638720
author Ch'ng, S.Y.
Andriyana, A.
Tee, Y.L.
Verron, E.
author_facet Ch'ng, S.Y.
Andriyana, A.
Tee, Y.L.
Verron, E.
author_sort Ch'ng, S.Y.
collection UM
description The effect of carbon black on the mechanical properties of elastomers is of great interest, because the filler is one of principal ingredients for the manufacturing of rubber products. While fillers can be used to enhance the properties of elastomers, including stress-free swelling resistance in solvent, it is widely known that the introduction of fillers yields significant inelastic responses of elastomers under cyclic mechanical loading, such as stress-softening, hysteresis and permanent set. When a filled elastomer is under mechanical deformation, the filler acts as a strain amplifier in the rubber matrix. Since the matrix local strain has a profound effect on the material's ability to absorb solvent, the study of the effect of carbon black content on the swelling characteristics of elastomeric components exposed to solvent in the presence of mechanical deformation is a prerequisite for durability analysis. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of carbon black content on the swelling of elastomers in solvent in the presence of static mechanical strains: simple extension and simple torsion. Three different types of elastomers are considered: unfilled, filled with 33 phr (parts per hundred) and 66 phr of carbon black. The peculiar role of carbon black on the swelling characteristics of elastomers in solvent in the presence of mechanical strain is explored.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T05:34:42Z
format Article
id um.eprints-13751
institution Universiti Malaya
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T05:34:42Z
publishDate 2015
publisher Materials
record_format dspace
spelling um.eprints-137512015-07-23T00:29:09Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/13751/ Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent Ch'ng, S.Y. Andriyana, A. Tee, Y.L. Verron, E. T Technology (General) TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery The effect of carbon black on the mechanical properties of elastomers is of great interest, because the filler is one of principal ingredients for the manufacturing of rubber products. While fillers can be used to enhance the properties of elastomers, including stress-free swelling resistance in solvent, it is widely known that the introduction of fillers yields significant inelastic responses of elastomers under cyclic mechanical loading, such as stress-softening, hysteresis and permanent set. When a filled elastomer is under mechanical deformation, the filler acts as a strain amplifier in the rubber matrix. Since the matrix local strain has a profound effect on the material's ability to absorb solvent, the study of the effect of carbon black content on the swelling characteristics of elastomeric components exposed to solvent in the presence of mechanical deformation is a prerequisite for durability analysis. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of carbon black content on the swelling of elastomers in solvent in the presence of static mechanical strains: simple extension and simple torsion. Three different types of elastomers are considered: unfilled, filled with 33 phr (parts per hundred) and 66 phr of carbon black. The peculiar role of carbon black on the swelling characteristics of elastomers in solvent in the presence of mechanical strain is explored. Materials 2015-03 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.um.edu.my/13751/1/Effects_of_Carbon_Black_and_the_Presence_of_Static.pdf Ch'ng, S.Y. and Andriyana, A. and Tee, Y.L. and Verron, E. (2015) Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent. Materials, 8 (3). pp. 884-898. ISSN 1996-1944, DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/Ma8030884 <https://doi.org/10.3390/Ma8030884>. http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/8/3/884/pdf Doi 10.3390/Ma8030884
spellingShingle T Technology (General)
TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
Ch'ng, S.Y.
Andriyana, A.
Tee, Y.L.
Verron, E.
Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title_full Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title_fullStr Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title_full_unstemmed Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title_short Effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
title_sort effects of carbon black and the presence of static mechanical strain on the swelling of elastomers in solvent
topic T Technology (General)
TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/13751/1/Effects_of_Carbon_Black_and_the_Presence_of_Static.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT chngsy effectsofcarbonblackandthepresenceofstaticmechanicalstrainontheswellingofelastomersinsolvent
AT andriyanaa effectsofcarbonblackandthepresenceofstaticmechanicalstrainontheswellingofelastomersinsolvent
AT teeyl effectsofcarbonblackandthepresenceofstaticmechanicalstrainontheswellingofelastomersinsolvent
AT verrone effectsofcarbonblackandthepresenceofstaticmechanicalstrainontheswellingofelastomersinsolvent