Issue 56, 2021

Effects of mixing temperature on the extrusion rheological behaviors of rubber-based compounds

Abstract

In this study, rim strip (R) and sidewall (S) compounds were prepared at varying initial mixing temperatures. The effects of the mixing temperature on the extrusion rheological behaviors of the compounds were investigated, and the relationships between the compound structure and the extrusion rheological behaviors were studied. The results showed that the tensile stress relaxation rates of both R and S were more sensitive to the mixing temperature than the shear stress relaxation rate, and the former was affected by both the dispersion of carbon black (CB) and the actual molecular weight of the rubbers. Strain sweep results showed that R, which had a higher CB content, had a more obvious Payne effect than S. When the initial mixing temperature increased from 80 °C to 90 °C, both storage modulus (G′) at a low shear strain and the ΔG′ of R obviously decreased, indicating CB dispersion improvement. The S extrudates showed higher die swell ratios (B) than the R extrudates, and the former was more sensitive to mixing temperature. The main factors influencing the B of the R and S were the CB dispersity and the molecular weight, respectively. In addition, at high extrusion rates, a sharkskin phenomenon could be observed for the R extrudate surfaces, whereas the S extrudates were more likely to be integrally distorted.

Graphical abstract: Effects of mixing temperature on the extrusion rheological behaviors of rubber-based compounds

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Aug 2021
Accepted
28 Oct 2021
First published
04 Nov 2021
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2021,11, 35703-35710

Effects of mixing temperature on the extrusion rheological behaviors of rubber-based compounds

Z. Du, Y. Du, Y. Gong, G. Liu, Z. Li, G. Yu and S. Zhao, RSC Adv., 2021, 11, 35703 DOI: 10.1039/D1RA05929G

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