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Rubber-like materials, definition

A thermoplastic elastomer (TPE) is a rubbery material with properties and functional performance very similar to those of a conventional thermoset rubber, yet it can be fabricated in the molten state as a thermoplastic. ASTM D 1566 defines TPEs as a diverse family of rubber-like materials that, unlike conventional vulcanized rubbers, can be processed and recycled like thermoplastic materials. Many TPEs meet the standard ASTM definition of a rubber, since they recover quickly and forcibly from large deformations, they can be elongated by more than 100 percent, their tension set is less than 50 percent, and they are sometimes insoluble in boiling organic solvents. Figure 4.35 indicates hardness ranges for various types of TPEs and conventional elastomers. [Pg.295]

A good operational definition of rubber-like elasticity is high deformability with essentially complete recoverability.81 84 The high deformability can be remarkably high, with some rubbery materials extending up to 15 times their original lengths. [Pg.52]

Early work in this field was conducted prior to the availability of powerful radiation sources. In 1929, E. B. Newton "vulcanized" rubber sheets with cathode-rays (16). Several studies were carried out during and immediately after world war II in order to determine the damage caused by radiation to insulators and other plastic materials intended for use in radiation fields (17, 18, 19). M. Dole reported research carried out by Rose on the effect of reactor radiation on thin films of polyethylene irradiated either in air or under vacuum (20). However, worldwide interest in the radiation chemistry of polymers arose after Arthur Charlesby showed in 1952 that polyethylene was converted by irradiation into a non-soluble and non-melting cross-linked material (21). It should be emphasized, that in 1952, the only cross-linking process practiced in industry was the "vulcanization" of rubber. The fact that polyethylene, a paraffinic (and therefore by definition a chemically "inert") polymer could react under simple irradiation and become converted into a new material with improved properties looked like a "miracle" to many outsiders and even to experts in the art. More miracles were therefore expected from radiation sources which were hastily acquired by industry in the 1950 s. [Pg.33]


See other pages where Rubber-like materials, definition is mentioned: [Pg.503]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.781]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.303]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.455]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.164 ]




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