Abstract

The structure of the bound rubber, the 1H NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance) relaxation time, and the crosslink density of the physical network and the glass transition, were studied for solution polymerized styrene-butadiene rubber (SSBR) filled by carbon black, to investigate the effects of carbon black on the chain mobility and dynamic mechanical properties. It was found by 1H NMR analysis that the rubber chains were adsorbed on the surface of carbon black to form physical crosslinks and restrict the mobility of the chains, especially for some high-mobility units such as chain ends. It was calculated, according to the molecular weight between adjacent crosslinks, that the main motion units of the tightly adsorbed chains appeared to be similar in size to the chain segments. The glass transition temperature (T g) obtained by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) could not be used to judge the effect of carbon black on chain mobility, while the appearance and change of the loss-tangent (tan δ) peak at high temperature in dynamic mechanical thermal spectrometry (DMTS) test showed that there were three chain states: free chains, loosely adsorbed chains, and tightly adsorbed chains. The dynamic rheology test showed that the unfilled SSBR compound had the rheological characteristics of entangled chain networks; however the nonlinear viscoelasticities of the filled SSBR were related to the gradual disentanglement of adsorbed chains and free chains. The peaks in tan δ vs. temperature curves implied that the motion unit size decreased with the increase of bound rubber content, and the modulus vs. temperature curve showed an apparently lower mobility of adsorbed chains than that of free chains through the very low dependence of modulus on temperature for the highly filled compounds. The extremely high tensile modulus of the vulcanizate with 63.6% carbon black at room temperature also implied that the adsorbed chains were in the glass state due to their restriction by the carbon black.

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