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Thermoplastic elastomers elastomeric alloys

Chattopadhyay S., Chaki T.K., and Bhowmick A.K., New thermoplastic elastomers from poly(ethyle-neoctene) (engage), poly(ethylene-vinyl acetate) and low-density polyethylene by electron beam technology structural characterization and mechanical properties. Rubber Chem. TechnoL, 74, 815, 2001. Roy Choudhury N. and Dutta N.K., Thermoplastic elastomeric natural rubber-polypropylene blends with reference to interaction between the components. Advances in Polymer Blends and Alloys Technology, Vol. 5 (K. Finlayson, ed.), Technomic Publishers, Pensylvania, 1994, 161. [Pg.156]

Rader C.P. and Abdou Sabet S., Two phase elastomeric alloys. Thermoplastic Elastomers from Rubber Plastic Blends (De S.K. and Bhowmick, A.K., eds.), Ellis Horwood, London, 1990, 159. [Pg.156]

Thermoplastic elastomers contain sequences of hard and soft repeating units in the polymer chain. Elastic recovery occurs when the hard segments act to pull back the more soft and rubbery segments. Cross-linking is not required. The six generic classes of TPEs are, in order of increasing cost and performance, styrene block copolymers, polyolefin blends, elastomeric alloys, thermoplastic urethanes, thermoplastic copolyesters, and thermoplastic polyamides. [Pg.518]

Thermoplastic elastomers (TPEs) continue to grow in commercial importance. These materials combine the functional properties of comparable thermoset elastomers with the fabrication advantages of thermoplastics. As a class, TPEs comprise several types of materials such as elastomeric alloys (EAs), styrenic block copolymers, copolyesters, and thermoplastic polyurethanes. [Pg.311]

In contrast to the rigid TPOs described above, low-modulus/flexible grades of TPO blends are also produced commercially. In flexible TPOs, the rubber content can be as high as 60 %, and in some cases, the dispersed rubber may also be partially cross-linked during the mixing without losing the thermoplastic character of the matrix. However, the latter type of dynamically vulcanized elastomeric alloys or thermoplastic vulcanizate rubbers (TPVs) are considered as a separate class of elastomeric materials and hence will be discussed under elastomer blends. On the other hand, the soft TPO blends discussed here contain a low-modulus olefln copolymer elastomer as the major component with some polypropylene added to impart melt processability. [Pg.1756]

Vulcanized elastomeric alloys (EA) are TPEs composed of mixtures of two or more polymers that have received a proprietary treatment. Elastomeric alloy-thermoplastic vulcanizates (EA-TPVs) are a category of TPEs made of a rubber and plastic polymer mixture in which the rubber phase is highly vulcanized. The plastic phase of an EA-TPV is a polypropylene, and the rubber phase is an ethylene-propylene elastomer. [Pg.290]

Considerable improvements in properties result, compared to RRPP, if cross-linking/curing is introduced into the rubber particles. PR modified, rubber compounds. Such materials may be known as dynamically crosslinked polyolefin elastomer or TPO-XL or, as a d5mamically vulcanized material or, as an elastomeric alloy (EA) or, as an elastomeric alloy thermoplastic vulcanizate (EA-TPV). If enough plastic is present (say 50%), the compound can still be easily processed by thermoplastic techniques. [Pg.115]

Thermoplastic elastomer, TPE Elastomer/thermoplastic blend, TEO Elastomeric alloy, EA TEO EA... [Pg.719]

Commercially important elastomeric thermoplastic alloys are dynamically vulcanized blends of polypropylene with high volume fractions of EPDM, polybutadiene rubber, nitrile rubber, and butyl rubber (Santoprene , Vyram , Geolast and Trefsin ) all currently sold by Advanced Elastomer Systems, a joint venture of Monsanto and Exxon. Another recent member of the commercial dynamically cured elastomeric thermoplastic alloys is the blend of PVC and a crosslinked ethylene copolymer (Alcryn , DuPont). The current consumption of all the elastomeric thermoplastic alloys in the USA is over 23 kton/y, with the EPDM/PP blend (Santoprene ) assuming about 90% of the market share. [Pg.1060]

Dynamically vulcanized, elastomeric thermoplastic alloys or TPVs display properties as good as or even better than the block copolymers, viz., a high degree of rubber elasticity yet good melt processability. The main advantages of the thermoplastic vulcanizate elastomer blends over the uncured thermoplastic/elasto-mer blends are... [Pg.1792]

Montell s in-reactor Catalloy ( catalytic alloy ) polymerization process alloys propylene with comonomers, such as EPR and EPDM, yielding very soft, very hard, and rigid plastics, impact grades or elastomeric TPOs, depending on the EPR or EPDM % content. The term olefinic for thermoplastic olefinic elastomers is arguable, because of the generic definition of olefinic. TPVs are composed of a continuous thermoplastic polypropylene phase and a discontinuous vulcanized rubber phase, usually EPDM, EPR, nitrile rubber, or butyl rubber. [Pg.197]


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