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CTBN liquid carboxyl terminated

Materials. Hycar CTBN is a registered trade name of a carboxyl-terminated, liquid copolymer of butadiene and acrylonitrile (B. F. Goodrich Chemical Co.). For most purposes it can be represented structurally as ... [Pg.330]

Filled liquid neoprene sealants are cured at room temperature by the addition of lead oxide, tertiary amines or epoxy resins. Neoprene sealants covered by a top coat of white chlorosulfonated polyethlyene are being used on solar collectors.21 Mixtures of carboxyl terminated acrylonitrile elastomers (CTBN) and liquid epoxy resins cure readily at room temperature in the presence of bis phenol A and amines.22 Coal tar-epoxy resin, two component epoxy resin, and epoxypolyester resin systems have been used as sealants.22... [Pg.102]

In the mid-60 s carboxyl-terminated polybutadiene/acrylo-nitrile (CTBN) liquid polymers were introduced for the purpose of epoxy resin modification. These telechellc polymers are essentially macromolecular diacids. They offer processing ease (and therefore advantage) over the solid carboxylic nitrile elastomers. It is no surprise that the epoxy prepreg industry (adhesive and non-adhesive varieties) found the liquid and solid carboxylic nitrile elastomer species useful together in processing liquid and lower molecular weight solid epoxy resins where elastomer modification was needed. [Pg.2]

Reasonably early however in the development of telechelic polybutadiene/acrylonitrile, Brenner and Drake (22) showed that mercaptan- and carboxyl-terminated liquid polybutadiene/acrylonitrile did respond to electron-beam (1-5 megarads) and cure (2-3 seconds/pass) from the liquid to the solid state. The mercaptan polymer (3.1% RSH, 23% bound acrylonitrile, Mn 1700) cured more readily. CTBN as expected required 50-100% higher irradiation dosage levels. With both MTBN and CTBN-type products of higher acid content (6% vs 3%), gum rubber properties of 13.8-34.5 mPa were obtained with 60-100% elongation. The E-beam cures were carried out in air at ambient temperature. Thus, unformulated telechelic polybutadienes were shown to be substantive to cure in the presence of ionizing radiation. [Pg.402]

Toughening epoxy matrices using liquid reactive rubbers (such as carboxyl-terminated butadiene acrylonitrile, CTBN, or the amine-terminated equivalent, ATBN) has been widely reported in the literature. Spherical rubber particles of a proper size distribution (usually 1-5 pm) can effectively enhance the toughness through crack blunting or cavitation mechanisms. However, rubber modification of epoxies becomes... [Pg.400]

In order to improve the internal stress performance even further or to provide toughness for potting and adhesive applications it is advantageous to introduce reactive additives to the basic epoxide compound formulation. One of the most popular additives that has found considerable use in this type of application is a rubber-like liquid copolymer known as carboxyl terminated butadiene/acrylonitrile (CTBN). The generalised molecular structure of this material is ... [Pg.321]

The carboxyl-terminated liquid polymers (CTBN) are telechelic polymers ranging in comonomer acrylonitrile content from 0 to 27 percent. Table 2 gives the characterization of these polymers. They are solvent-free and range in M from 3400 to 4000. The higher acrylonitrile-containing CTBN type possesses the best balance of oil- and solvent-resistant properties. [Pg.431]

Elastomeric modifiers are used to increase the peel strength (toughness) of epoxy resin adhesives. The most commonly used elastomeric materials are functionally terminated polybutadiene resins made by the B.F. Goodrich Company, Chemical Group under the trade name of Hycar Reactive Liquid Polymers. Initially, carboxyl-terminated butadiene acrylonitrile (CTBN) resins were introduced the carboxyl terminated materials are usually adducted with the epoxy resin to improve compatibility and to increase the toughness. [Pg.355]

Later, in 1974, amine reactive versions of the liquid nitrile polymers (ATBN) were issued, thereby offering another way to introduce rubbery segments into a cured epoxy resin network. References are cited which provide detailed discussions of nitrile rubber, carboxylic nitrile rubber and both carboxyl- and amine-terminated nitrile liquid polymers (1-4). Table I illustrates CTBN and ATBN products structurally. Table II provides properties for typical solid carboxylic nitrile elastomers. [Pg.2]


See other pages where CTBN liquid carboxyl terminated is mentioned: [Pg.329]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.2685]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.623]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.400]    [Pg.655]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.33]   


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