Abstract

Degradative characteristics were studied using specimens of three polyurethane-based elastomeric modules that were treated in solutions of varying acidity, oxygen content and temperature. After periods of 10 and 100 days, molecular weight distribution changes, mechanical property changes and elemental chemistry changes were studied using gel permeation chromatography (GPC), stress-relaxation testing and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), respectively. As determined through analyses of the molecular, mechanical, and elemental changes after treatment, the degradative mechanism was influenced by whether the polyurethane was polyester-based or polyether-based, and the degree of structural degradation was influenced by the type and duration of conditioning treatment. Degradation of the polyester-based materials after treatment was dominated by a chain scission mechanism; conversely, the degradation of the polyether-based material was dominated by a crosslinking mechanism. Among the conditioning treatments, the combined effects of an increase in acidity, oxygen content and temperature most influenced the degree of degradation with time, with the increase in temperature having the greatest effect of any of the single variables investigated.

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