Bber Compounding Technology
Bber Compounding Technology
TECHNOLOGY
RUBBER COMPOUNDING
COMPOUND
Rubber compound is a homogenous and intimate
mixture of polymer(s) with all the ingredients so as to
provide a defined set of mechanical properties to the
finished product.
COMPOUNDING
It is the science of selecting and combining elastomers
and additives to obtain physical and chemical
properties for a finished product.
RUBBER COMPOUNDING
OBJECTIVE
1. To secure certain properties in the finished product to
satisfy the service requirements.
2. To attain processing characteristics necessary for efficient
utilization of available equipment.
3. To achieve desirable properties and processability at the
lowest cost.
Abrasion resistance
(cont’d)
COMPOUNDING INGREDIENTS
5. FILLERS
FINE PARTICLES MATERIALS WHICH ARE ADDED TO RUBBER IN
SUBSTANTIAL QUANTITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF REINFORCING, OR FOR
ECONOMY.
6. PEPTIZER
CHEMICAL ADDED IN VERY SMALL QUANTITY (USUALLY LESS THAN
0.5%) TO REDUCE THE VISCOSITY OF THE RAW RUBBER .
7. MASTICATION
PHYSICAL WORKING OF THE RUBBER TO REDUCE THE VISCOSITY
8. PLASTICIZERS / SOFTENERS
LIQUID INGREDIENTS ADDED TO RUBBER TO MAKE THE COMPOUND
SOFT THUS ENABLING INCORPORATION OF LARGE QUANTITY OF
FILLERS
(cont’d)
COMPOUNDING INGREDIENTS
9. PROCESSING AIDS
CHEMICAL WHICH HELP THE RUBBER COMPOUND TO FLOW BETTER
AND THUS MAKE PROCESSING OPERATION (E.G. EXTRUDING ,
CALENDERING etc) EASIER.
10. ANTIDEGRADANTS
CHEMICAL ADDED IN SMALL QUANTITIES , WHICH EXTEND THE USEFUL
SERVICE LIFE OF A RUBBER PRODUCT, AND PREVENT EARLY FAILURE
DUE TO THE DEGRADING INFLUENCE OF HEAT, OXYGEN, OZONE AND UV
LIGHT.
11. BONDING AGENTS
CHEMICAL WHICH HELP TO IMPROVE THE ADHESION BETWEEN RUBBER
AND FABRICS OR METALS.
12. BLOWING AGENTS
CHEMICAL WHICH DECOMPOSE DURING VULCANIZATION.
General Compounding
Fillers Plasticizers Antioxidants
Black synthetic mineral fillers Mineral oils Heat ageing
Natural mineral fillers Esters Oxygene ageing
activators Ethers Fatigue
Other liquids Ozone
Crazing
Metal poisons
DESIGN REQUIREMENTS
SERVICE REQUIREMENTS/VULCANISATE PROPERTIES
PROCESSABILITY
ECONOMICS
DESIGN BASED ON
CUSTOMER SPECIFICATION/REQUIREMENTS
COMPETITOR'S SAMPLE
DEVELOP A NEW PRODUCT
POLYMER SELECTION CRITERIA
Cost
Ease of mixing
Strength requirements
Modulus or stiffness requirement
Abrasion resistance requirement
Elongation requirement
Oil resistance requirement
Low temperature requirement
Fatigue requirement
Tack
Set of stress relaxation
Service temperature
Dynamic properties (hysteresis, damping resistance)
Flammability
Chemical resistance
PRINCIPLES OF COMPOUNDING &COMPOUND DESIGN
PRINCIPLES OF COMPOUNDING &COMPOUND DESIGN
POLYMER SELECTION
Service Below 100oC Service Between 100oC & 150oC Service Above 150oC
NR, SBR, OT NBR, CR, CSM, EPM, EPDM, MVQ, FMQ, FPM
IIR, ECO, ACM
NR, SBR OT EPM, CR, CSM, NBR ACM MVQ FMQ FPM
EPDM, IIR ECO
General &Special Rubbers
FKM
SPECIALITY
15 – 20 (4%) PS HNBR
APPLICATION
EVA ACM
SILICONE
SPECIAL
4 (14%) NBR HR EPDM CR PURPOSE
GENERAL
4 (82%) NR SBR BR IR
PURPOSE
PRICE
Performance Limits of Properties of
Elastomers
Heat Resistance of some Engineering Elastomers
• If low temperature act for a sufficiently long period of time, then chain segments may
become rigid and undergo transition to the glass state.
• The glass transition temperature Tg is the lowest figure for flexibility at low
temperatures and the most important characteristic value in scientific terms.
BLENDS WITH POLYMERS
Base polymer
Saturated rubber – peroxide e.g. EPR with DCP
Unsaturated rubber-peroxide, sulphur/accelerator & resins, e.g. EPDM with
DCP, NR with sulphur accelerator, IIR with Resin
Special Polymers – Metal oxide, Dioxime, Resin e.g. CR with ZnO/MgO
ACCELERATORS
Service Requirements
Service temperature
Duration of exposure
Mechanical property requirement.
Dynamic property requirement
Ageing behaviour and permanent set requirements.
Special property requirement.
RECIPES FOR ACCELERATED S-VULCANIZATION SYSTEMS a
NR SBR Nitrile (NBR) Butyl (IIR) EPDM
1 2
Zinc oxide 5.00 5.00 3.00 2.00 3.00 5.00
Stearic acid 2.00 2.00 0.50 0.50 2.00 1.00
Sulphur 2.50 1.80 0.50 0.25 2.00 1.50
DTDM b - - - 1.00 - -
TBBS b 0.60 1.20 - - - -
MBTS b - - 2.00 - 0.50 -
MBT b - - - - - 0.50
TMTD b - - 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.50
Vulcanization conditions c
Temperature (b C) 148 153 140 140 153 160
Time (min) 25 30 60 60 20 20
a. Concentration in phr
b. B. DTDM, 4,4’-dithiodimorpholine; TBBS, N-t-butylbenzothiazole-2-
sulfenamide; MBTS, 2,2’-dithiobisbenzothiazole (2-benzothiazole disulfide);
MBT, 2-mercaptobenzothiazole; TMTD, tetramethylthiuram disulfide.
c. Conditions change depending on other aspects of the composition.
RECIPES FOR VULCANIZATION BY PHENOLIC CURATIVES,
QUINONE DERIVATIVES OR MALEIMIDES a
Vulcanization conditions c
Temperature (b C) 180 153 153 153 153
Time (min) 30 20 25 25 30
VULCANIZATION SYSTEMS FOR
CHLOROPRENE RUBBER
ZnO 5.00 5.00 5.00
MgO 4.00 - 4.00
Calcium Stearate - 5.50 -
Stearic acid - - 1.00
TMTM - - 1.00
DOTG - - 1.00
ETU 0.50 0.50 -
Sulphur - - 1.00
Vulcanization conditions c
Temperature (b C) 153 153 153
Time (min)
15 15 15
a. Concentration in phr
b. Conditions change depending on other aspects of the compositions.
c. Temperature and time of post cure in air
FILLERS
• particle size
• surface area
• geometrical characteristics
FILLERS
Reinforcing Type Carbon Black (listed in N220 (ISAF)
order of increasing N330(HAF)
particle size) N550 (FEF)
N762 (SRF-LM)
N990 (MT)
Non-black Silica
Zinc Oxide
Magnesium Carbonate
Aluminium Silicate
Sodium Aluminosilicate
Magnesium Silicate
Extending Type Calcium Carbonate
Barium Sulfate
Aluminium Trihydrate
Talc and Soapstone
• reinforcing carbon blacks
• non- reinforcing carbon blacks
• reinforcing non- black
• semi reinforcing non- black
• non- reinforcing non- black
FF - Fine Furnace
Selection is based on
• Reinforcement
• Cost
• Processing requirement
• Colour requirement
• Service requirement
• Any other special requirement
Compound Designing –
Hardness
phr required
Polymer Hardness for 1 unit
increase in
Hardness
NR SBR CR NBR
37-40 39-41 41-43 42-44
1.5 1.8 1.3 1.2 2.2 1.7 2.4 SAF N110 113
1.7 2.0 1.5 1.3 2.5 1.9 2.7 ISAF N220 114
1.9 2.3 1.7 1.5 2.8 2.1 3.0 HAF N330 102
2.3 2.8 2.1 1.8 3.4 2.6 3.7 FEF N550 119
Processing aids
A softener is an ingredient that :
1. speeds up the rate of polymer breakdown
2. helps to disperse the other compounding
ingredients
3. helps to reduce nerve within the compound
4 can impart building tack
5. improves the processing properties and
modify the final compound properties
6. adjusts the compound cost and reduce power
consumption during processing
Mineral petroleum oils
They are available from petroleum industry.
paraffinic
naphthenic
aromatic
Plasticizers
Selection is based on
Nature of polymer
Solubility parameter
Viscosity requirement
Filler dispersion
Processing requirement
Any other special requirement
ANTI-DEGRADANTS- They are agents added to rubber to
improve ageing properties, resistance to oxygen, ozone, alkali, acid, chemicals etc
Selection is based on
azocarbonamide (ADC)
Cost/price
Processing
Performance
Requirements
• High hardness.
Selection of Ingredients:
Ingredients PHR
EPDM (medium ENB) 100.0
Carbon Black (GPF-HS/N-650) 120.0
Carbon Black (SFR/N-774) 30.0
Napthenic oil 135.0
ZnO 5.0
Stearic Acid 2.0
TMTD 1.8
MBT 0.6
Sulphur 1.5
POLYSAR EPDM RUBBER BRAKE CUP AND SEAL
VULKANOX HS 0,8
ZINC OXIDE 5
DICUP 40C 7
EDMA 2
174.8
POLYSAR EPDM RUBBER
BRAKE CUP AND SEAL
COMPOUND PROPERTIES
MOONEY VISCOSITY 79
ML 1 + 4 AT 100°C
MOONEY SCORCH 8
t5 AT 125°C, MINUTES
VULCANISED PROPERTIES
(8 MINS AT 180°C)
HARDNESS SHORE A 70
COMPRESSION SET, % 6
24 HRS AT 120°C
STAGES OF PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT :
Compound Design,
Lab Evaluation,
Analysis of feedback ,
Field trials,
Validation of manufacturing
process.
MIXING
73
MIXING Five main steps involved in the Mixing Operations :
1. Sub Division
Of larger lumps & aggregates,
2. Incorporation
Of powders or liquids
3. Dispersion
Involves reduction of the size of agglomerates,
4. Simple Mixing
Involves moving particles from one point to another.
74
MIXING
• A good Dispersion rating requires :
High Shear Stress (i.e. High mix viscosity),
High Filler Loading,
Polymers of not too low viscosity,
Low Mixing temperatures,
Charging oils at the end of mixing cycle.
77
NR Mastication & Blending NR+SR
80
Effects of “Over Mastication” of NR
Lower shrinkage of extrudates / calendared sheets,
• Lower die swell & loss of dimensional control,
• Increased curing defects in finished products due to excessive
flow and air entrapment,
• Compounded sheets stick to each other during storage and
sagging of sheets,
• Excessive surface tack due to poor green compound strength,
• Loss of dynamic, tensile & tear strength properties of the
vulcanizate,
• Changes in the viscosity of solvent based solutions & loss of
surface tack.
81
MIXING PROBLEMS & REASONS
PROBLEMS REASONS
Batch size not optimized, mixing time is lower, filler
addition time not proper, insufficient ram pressure, poor
Poor Dispersion temp. control, poor / inconsistent raw material quality,
excessive moisture content in polymer and fillers, under /
over mastication of NR.
86
F 270 Banbury Mixer K 6A INTERMIX
87
Capacities: Banbury Mixers
Mixer Mixing Torque rating
Approx. kW / RPM Approx.
Banbury Chamber Speed
Batch Wt * Machine
Mixer Net Volume, Range, Compact Uni
kg Weight, MT
ltr RPM Drive Drive
F 50 50 50 40 - 120 2.2 4.6 13.2
F 80 80 60 30 - 105 3.7 6.3 16.1
F 120 120 90 30 - 90 5.6 9.0 19.5
F 160 160 120 20 - 80 7.5 12.0 30.2
F 200 200 165 20 - 60 8.9 12.7 30.5
F 270 270 202 20 - 60 13.1 24.6 43.0
F 370 414 310 20 - 60 - 37.3 54.0
F 440 438 330 20 - 60 - - -
F 620 672 500 20 - 50 - 52.2 110.5
shaping
vulcanization
MIXING PROCEDURE
Weighing compounding ingrediants as per
formulation
Mastication
Maturation
Prewarming
Blank preparation
DRY RUBBER PRODUCTS MANUFACTURE
COMPOUNDIN
RUBBER CHEMICALS
G
MATURATION
PRE-
WARMING
TESTING& QC
MOULDING
(HYDRAULIC
PRESS)
VULCANISATION