The influence of devulcanization and revulcanization on sulfur crosslink types: Recycling of ground tyre rubber

Published: 20 June 2024| Version 2 | DOI: 10.17632/d87tmr6td3.2
Contributor:
James Innes

Description

Devulcanized rubber could be a valuable material feedstock to help manufacture sustainable rubber products. However, the differences in chemistry and structure of devulcanized rubber have limited industrial uptake. This work demonstrates how devulcanization affects the concentration and ratios of mono-, di- and poly- sulfidic crosslinks. These residual crosslinks make devulcanized rubber chemically dissimilar from virgin rubber, affecting (re)vulcanization. The hypothesis that sulfur rank of revulcanized material can be modified by sulfur/accelerator ratio was evaluated by two different cure packages. Despite substantial differences in accelerator/sulfur ratio, both recycled rubber compounds favoured formation of poly-sulfidic crosslinks.

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Please see the methodology section of the included draft paper for details on how each of the results were produced.

Institutions

University of Bradford

Categories

Materials Science, Rubber, Elastomer, Vulcanization

Funding

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

EP/S018573/1

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