Abstract

Abstract An apparatus and procedure to determine the amounts of sol and gel rubber in dried latex films and crude rubber have been described. It is shown that whereas plantation smoked sheet and crepe contain large and varying quantities of rubber soluble in petroleum ether, dried rubber films from latex are practically free from sol rubber when oxidation has been avoided. Latex increases in sol rubber content when subjected to various treatments permitting oxidation of the hydrocarbon. It appears from this work that the rubber in the form of latex is very susceptible to oxidation, which however involves only minute quantities of combined oxygen. When latex film rubber is subjected to creeping, it shows an increased content of sol rubber corresponding to that of crepe. A short milling of crepe was found to convert it completely into sol rubber. This confirms the gel-sol transformation mechanism of breakdown. Gel rubber from dried latex films is swelled to a maximum of 1500 to 7800 per cent but is not dissolved when placed in benzene, chloroform, carbon tetra-chloride or carbon disulfide and allowed to stand for several days. Gel rubber becomes soluble and therefore diffusible in these solvents as a result of oxidation. It was found that dried latex film and various types of crude rubber swelled to a maximum of 1000 to 2400 per cent in petroleum ether and that this swelling was not proportional to the sol content. This investigation strengthens the belief that sol rubber is an oxidation product of gel rubber. The formula for sol rubber is suggested as (C5H8)nO2, and a relationship between the molecular weight and the oxygen content is postulated on the basis that oxygen acts as a molecular splitting agent for both gel and sol.

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