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Peroxide-cured acrylonitrile/butadiene

The elastomeric sealing components of the metering valve are particularly critical. In those valves used with CFC propellants, the elastomeric seals have typically been formed from an acrylonitrile/butadiene rubber, which has been cured with sulfur. These rubber seals may not be fully compatible with HFA propellants hence, alternative elastomeric materials have been used. These materials include peroxide-cured acrylonitrile/ butadiene, ethylene-propylene diene monomer (EPDM), and chloroprene and thermoplastic elastomers (TPE). The elastomeric materials used to form the dynamic seals around the stem and the static gasket seal between the can and valve may differ based on the required properties of the rubber for the specific function of the seal. The most important characteristics of the elastomeric seals... [Pg.2275]

This combination of monomers is unique in that the two are very different chemically, and in thek character in a polymer. Polybutadiene homopolymer has a low glass-transition temperature, remaining mbbery as low as —85° C, and is a very nonpolar substance with Htde resistance to hydrocarbon fluids such as oil or gasoline. Polyacrylonitrile, on the other hand, has a glass temperature of about 110°C, and is very polar and resistant to hydrocarbon fluids (see Acrylonitrile polymers). As a result, copolymerization of the two monomers at different ratios provides a wide choice of combinations of properties. In addition to providing the mbbery nature to the copolymer, butadiene also provides residual unsaturation, both in the main chain in the case of 1,4, or in a side chain in the case of 1,2 polymerization. This residual unsaturation is useful as a cure site for vulcanization by sulfur or by peroxides, but is also a weak point for chemical attack, such as oxidation, especially at elevated temperatures. As a result, all commercial NBR products contain small amounts ( 0.5-2.5%) of antioxidant to protect the polymer during its manufacture, storage, and use. [Pg.516]

The unmodified PGV and modified MMTs were used as a fillers in ethylene-propylene copolymer EPR and hydrogenated butadiene-acrylonitrile rubber HNBR. The elastomers were cured using dicumyl peroxide DCP. [Pg.77]


See other pages where Peroxide-cured acrylonitrile/butadiene is mentioned: [Pg.516]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.147]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2275 ]




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Butadiene-acrylonitrile

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