Vulcanizates of chlorobutyl rubber (CIIR) with the accelerated sulfur generally exhibit poor crosslinking density owing to the low level of unsaturation in the backbone of CIIR. Therefore, the sulfur cured CIIR shows inferior thermo-mechanical properties at elevated temperature. In addition to this, the vulcanization of CIIR with accelerated sulfur is limited at higher temperature due to reversion. To solve these problems, 4,4′-bis (maleimido) diphenyl methane (BMDM) was applied as a crosslinking additive along with the accelerated sulfur. The detailed curing studies have proved that the presence of BMDM greatly enhanced the rheometric torque and the reversion resistance while curing CIIR with accelerated sulfur even at higher vulcanization temperature. Moreover, the crosslinking densities of the sulfur cured CIIR have increased by 109% with the use of 1 phr BMDM and further rose to 380% with 5 phr BMDM. The improved crosslink density could enable reduction of the compression set of the sulfur cured CIIR to around 40% at 100 °C when it was vulcanized in the presence of 5 phr BMDM. The kinetic studies revealed that incorporation of this additive does not adversely affect the original vulcanization behavior of CIIR with accelerated sulfur, instead it marginally improved the speed of the vulcanization.
This paper describes the use of a combination of 4, 4' bis(maleimido)diphenylmethane and ZnO as a high-temperature processable vulcanising agent for the short aramid and carbon fibre-filled bromo-isobutylene-isoprene rubber. The fibre breakage analysis, cure characteristics, mechanical, thermal and morphological properties of the composites were evaluated with different fibre loading. The fibre breakage analyses revealed that the aramid fibres have good length retention property compared to carbon fibres. The morphological analysis of the extracted aramid fibres showed severe surface roughness primarily due to fibrillation after shear mixing. The fibrillated aramid fibres lead to aggregation and poor dispersion of the fibres in the rubber matrix. However, fibrillation imparted surface roughness and increased surface area on the aramid fibres which improved the fibre-matrix interaction via mechanical anchoring. On the other hand, the carbon fibre-filled composite showed poor fibre-matrix interaction and inferior strength and modulus.
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