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Adhesion property of crosslinked epoxidized (natural rubber)/(acrylonitrile‐butadiene) rubber blend adhesives in the presence of petro resin tackifier
Author(s) -
Poh Beng Teik,
Soo Kai Wai,
Azahari Baharin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of vinyl and additive technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.295
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1548-0585
pISSN - 1083-5601
DOI - 10.1002/vnl.21531
Subject(s) - materials science , adhesive , composite material , benzoyl peroxide , natural rubber , acrylonitrile , shear strength (soil) , coating , nitrile rubber , izod impact strength test , adhesion , polyethylene terephthalate , scanning electron microscope , substrate (aquarium) , ultimate tensile strength , polymer , polymerization , copolymer , oceanography , environmental science , layer (electronics) , soil science , soil water , geology
Loop tack, peel strength, shear strength, and morphology of (benzoyl peroxide)‐cured epoxidized natural rubber (ENR 25)/(acrylonitrile‐butadiene) rubber (NBR) blend adhesive were investigated by using petro resin as the tackifying resin. Benzoyl peroxide loading varied from 1 to 5 parts by weight per hundred parts of resin (phr), whereas the petro resin loading was fixed at 40 phr. A SHEEN hand coater was used to coat the adhesive on the polyethylene terephthalate substrate at 30 μm and 120 μm coating thicknesses. (ENR 25)/NBR adhesive was crosslinked at 80°C for 30 min prior to the determination of adhesion strength by a Lloyd adhesion tester operating at 10–60 cm/min. Results show that maximum loop tack and peel strength occur at 2 phr of benzoyl peroxide loading, whereby optimum cohesive and adhesive strength are obtained. However, shear strength increases with increasing benzoyl peroxide concentration, an observation that is associated with the steady increase in the cohesive strength. Scanning electron microscopy micrograph shows that little adhesive remained on the substrate at 0 phr compared with 2 phr of benzoyl peroxide loading, indicating that crosslinking increases the peel strength of the adhesive. In all cases, the adhesion properties increase with coating thickness and testing rate . J.VINYL ADDIT. TECHNOL., 24:93–98, 2018. © 2015 Society of Plastics Engineers