Abstract

The dynamic crosslinking method has been widely used to prepare rubber/plastic blends with thermoplastic properties, and the rubber phase is crosslinked in these blends. Both polyolefin elastomer (POE) and ethylene-propylene-diene monomer rubber (EPDM) can be crosslinked, which is different from usual dynamic crosslinking components. In this paper, dynamic crosslinked POE/EPDM blends were prepared. For POE/EPDM blends without dynamic crosslinking, EPDM can play a nucleation role, leading to POE crystallizing at a higher temperature. After dynamic crosslinking, the crosslinking points hinder the mobility of POE chains, resulting in smaller crystals, but having too many crosslinking points suppresses POE crystallization. Synchrotron radiation studies show that phase separation occurs and phase regions form in non-crosslinked blends. After crosslinking, crosslinking points connecting EPDM and part of POE chains, enabling more POE to enter the EPDM phase and thus weakening phase separation, indicates that dynamic crosslinking improves the compatibility of POE/EPDM, also evidenced by a lower β conversion temperature and higher α conversion temperature than neat POE from dynamic mechanical analysis. Moreover, crosslinking networks hinder the crystal fragmentation during stretching and provide higher strength, resulting in 8.3% higher tensile strength of a 10 wt% EPDM blend than neat POE and almost the same elongation at break. Though excessive crosslinking points offer higher strength, they weaken the elongation at break.

Highlights

  • Ethylene-octene copolymerized elastomer is a synthetic thermoplastic elastomer [1,2]with a significant narrow molecular weight distribution and six-carbon short-chain branches [3,4,5]

  • The Variation of Torque for polyolefin elastomer (POE)/ethylene-propylene-diene monomer rubber (EPDM) Blend Crosslinking Promoted by Dicumyl peroxide (DCP)

  • POE is different than PP, which can be crosslinked by DCP [23]

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Summary

Introduction

Ethylene-octene copolymerized elastomer is a synthetic thermoplastic elastomer [1,2]. There are still some fundamental issues related to dynamic crosslinked materials with components that are probably all crosslinked, which are important but lack of study, such as how dynamic crosslinking influences the molecular structures, the compatibility of the two materials before and after crosslinking, and its effects on crystallization dynamics and mechanical properties Studying these elements is important for industrial applications. Partially crystalline EPDM and an ethylene-octene random copolymer elastomer (ENGAGETM 8480 Polyolefin Elastomer) are used to investigate these effects on POE/EPDM blends. The polyolefin elastomer (POE copolymer) selected for this study was ENGAGETM 8480 polyolefin elastomer, which is an ethylene-octene copolymer with 20 wt% octene content supplied by Dow Chemical Company (Midland, TX, USA) It has an Mw of 94500 g/mol, Mw/Mn ~ 2.4, a melt flow rate (MFR) of 1.0 g/10 min (ASTMD-1238, 230 ◦C, 2.160 kg), a density of 0.902 g/cm, a viscosity ML1+4 (at 121 ◦C) of 18, and a melting point of 98 ◦C.

Thermal Analysis
In Situ Tensile and Synchrotron SAXS Measurements
Mechanical Testing
Results and Discussion
Dynamic Mechanical Behavior
Conclusions
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