Cavity Formation in Silica-Filled Rubber Compounds Observed During Deformation by Ultra Small-Angle X-Ray Scattering
Ilya Yakovlev (1, 3), Michael Sztucki (1), Frank Fleck (2), Hossein, Ali Karimi-Varzaneh (2), Jorge Lacayo-Pineda (2, 3), Christoph Vatterott, (2), Ulrich Giese (3, 4) ((1) European Synchrotron Radiation Facility,, Grenoble, France, (2) Continental Reifen Deutschland GmbH

TL;DR
This study presents a novel Ultra Small-Angle X-ray Scattering method with a multi-sample device to analyze cavitation in silica-filled rubber, revealing structural changes and durability under deformation.
Contribution
Introduces a new high-throughput X-ray scattering technique for early detection and quantification of cavitation in silica-filled rubbers, covering hierarchical filler structures.
Findings
Cavitation onset strain is consistent across samples.
Higher polymer content improves silica structure durability.
Cavity size increases with strain, indicating progressive damage.
Abstract
When silica-filled rubber compounds are deformed, structural modifications in the material's bulk lead to irreversible damage, the most significant of which is cavitation appearing within the interfaces of interconnected polymer and filler networks. This work introduces a new method to analyze cavitation in industrial-grade rubbers based on Ultra Small-Angle X-ray Scattering. This method employs a specially designed multi-sample stretching device for high-throughput measurements with statistical relevance. The proposed data reduction approach allows for early detection and quantification of cavitation while providing at the same time information on the hierarchical filler structures at length scales ranging from the primary particle size to large silica agglomerates over four orders of magnitude. To validate the method, the scattering of SSBR rubber compounds filled with highly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolymer Nanocomposites and Properties · Fiber-reinforced polymer composites
