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| GENERAL RUBBER TERMINOLOGY |
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As an engineering material, elastomers offer elasticity and flexibility,
toughness which provides wear, cut and abrasion resistance, physical
strength, relative impermeability to liquids and gases, and oil
and fuel resistance.
• An evaluation
of physical properties of a given elastomer should be made in a
specific compound under specific application conditions. However,
as a general guide to comparative properties, material producers
and rubber compounders can supply data based on "typical"
recipes or compounds in standard tests. |
| Hardness |
| Hardness is determined by measuring
the extent to which surface resists indentation by a standard indenter.
It is an important property, which has a relationship to modulus and
tensile strength. Shore Durometer commonly makes measurements. |
| Tensile Properties |
| Tensile strength in Mega pascals
(pounds per square inch), measures the load per unit area of the original
cross section to cause rupture. Elongation measures rubber strength.
It expresses by percent, the amount of increase over initial length
at instant of rupture. Modulus, in Mega Pascals (pounds per square
inch) is a measure of loading required to stretch a test specimen a
standard amount, usually 100 to 300% |
| Compression Set |
| A
measure of the degree to which a test specimen under standard loading
and time, "sets" or
deforms, or does not rebound to original dimensions. Expressed in percent.
Important in sealing applications, particularly for high pressures
over extended periods. |
| High Temperature Performance |
| Measures effect heat has on
properties of rubber compound. Particularly important for automotive
applications where performance at elevated temperature is increasingly
important. |
| Fluid Resistance Properties |
| Elastomers
are generally classified as non-oil-resistant, general-purpose polymers
or oil-resistant, specialty
polymers. General purpose, higher volume polymers are lower cost with
broad use in tires and treads. The oil-resistant rubbers, particularly
nitrile, find specialized use in a large number of engineering applications
where fuel and oil resistance are important. |
| Low Temperature Characteristics |
| Flexibility
is the property most adversely affected by low temperatures. Lowering
temperature results
in loss of resilience, increased hardness, and finally brittleness.
The brittle point is determined not only by the temperature and nature
of the rubber, but also by its rate of deformation. Hardness, hysteresis,
Joule-effect, flex cracking, modulus, elongation, tensile strength
and permanent set are also temperature dependent. |
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