Effect of Oxygen Concentration on Aging of Rubber Vulcanizates. II. Effect of Partial Pressure of Oxygen on Changes in Physical Properties Accompanying Oxidation
The over-all rate of deterioration of physical properties increases with the oxygen concentration, as would be expected from the increased rate of oxygen absorption: The nature of the deterioration resulting from a given amount of oxygen absorbed is influenced also by changes in the partial pressure of oxygen in the aging atmosphere. It appears that chain scission is favored at higher oxygen concentrations, while cross-linking becomes of greater relative importance at lower oxygen concentrations. These data suggest that R⋅ radicals are more effective than RO2⋅ radicals in reacting with double bonds to form crosslinks. Heat aging in the absence of oxygen, as observed by heating a vulcanizate in lamp-grade nitrogen, results in considerable stiffening, particularly in the case of a GR-S black stock. This effect is observed primarily in the first few hours of heating, and may account for some of the erratic behavior observed in the early stages of aging when changes in physical properties are compared on the basis of amount of oxygen absorbed. Higher oxygen concentration brings about a more rapid oxidation, and also results in a higher proportion of chain scission compared to cross-linking for a given amount of oxygen absorbed. As tensile decay is the most evident sign of deterioration of Hevea stocks, it follows that the aging behavior of natural rubber in air at normal storage temperatures will be better than that predicted by high temperature testing in oxygen. In the case of GR-S stocks, on the other hand, oxidative hardening is the most serious result of aging, and consequently, the aging behavior of GR-S stocks in air at normal storage temperatures is poorer than would be expected on the basis of comparative tests in oxygen at higher temperatures.