Silicone TPV offers high performance solutions.In a growing number of applications, thermoplastic elastomers Thermoplastic elastomers (TPE), sometimes referred to as thermoplastic rubbers, are a class of copolymers or a physical mix of polymers (usually a plastic and a rubber) which consist of materials with both thermoplastic and elastomeric properties. (TPEs) are used as alternatives to thermoset A polymer-based liquid or powder that becomes solid when heated, placed under pressure, treated with a chemical or via radiation. The curing process creates a chemical bond that, unlike a thermoplastic, prevents the material from being remelted. See thermoplastic. rubber because of their ability to reduce the total fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´sh n the construction or making of a restoration. cost and increase the design flexibility (as an example, the combination of soft and hard materials by overmolding). Like traditional thermoset rubbers, TPEs possess elastomeric properties. However, TPEs can be processed by conventional thermoplastic A polymer material that turns to liquid when heated and becomes solid when cooled. There are more than 40 types of thermoplastics, including acrylic, polypropylene, polycarbonate and polyethylene. techniques such as injection molding injection molding n. A manufacturing process for forming objects, as of plastic or metal, by heating the molding material to a fluid state and injecting it into a mold. , extrusion and blow molding. Thermoplastic vulcanizates (TPVs) are an alloy type of TPE TPE Thermoplastic Elastomer TPE Terminal de Paiement Electronique (French) TPE Total Power Exchange TPE Twisted Pair Ethernet TPE Tampines Expressway (Singapore) TPE Therapeutic Plasma Exchange , consisting of cured rubber particles suspended in a continuous thermoplastic phase. The most common commercially available TPVs are based on the combination of polypropylene polypropylene (pŏl'ēprō`pəlēn), plastic noted for its light weight, being less dense than water; it is a polymer of propylene. It resists moisture, oils, and solvents. (PP) and cured EPDM rubber EPDM rubber (ethylene propylene diene monomer rubber) is an elastomer which is characterized by wide range of applications. EPDM rubber is used in vibrators and seals; glass-run channel; radiator, garden and appliance hose; tubing; washers; belts; and electrical insulation. . As compared to thermoplastics, these materials offer some unique properties due to the cured rubber phase, such as lower compression set, increased resilience resilience (r n and improved chemical resistance. However, the possible applications for TPVs are limited by the temperature extremes these materials can sustain. For example, a PP-EPDM based TPV TPV Temporary Protection Visa (Australia) TPV Terminal Punto Venta TPV Third-Party Verification TPV Thermophotovoltaic TPV Thermoplastic Vulcanizate (thermoplastic elastomer) TPV Total Payment Volume is limited to a maximum service temperature in the range of 100 to 135[degrees]C (dependent on product hardness). Silicone silicone, polymer in which atoms of silicon and oxygen alternate in a chain; various organic radicals, such as the methyl group, CH3, are bound to the silicon atoms. TPV (STPV), a thermoplastic silicone vulcanizate under the trade name of TPSiV, has been invented by Dow Corning Dow Corning is a multinational corporation headquartered in Midland, Michigan, USA. Dow Corning specializes in silicon and silicone-based technology, offering more than 7,000 products and services. Dow Corning is equally owned by The Dow Chemical Company and Corning, Inc. (refs. 1-4) and most recently, commercialized by Multibase, a Dow Corning subsidiary (ref. 5). The material is an alloy type TPE consisting of fully cured silicone rubber Noun 1. silicone rubber - made from silicone elastomers; retains flexibility resilience and tensile strength over a wide temperature range synthetic rubber, rubber - any of various synthetic elastic materials whose properties resemble natural rubber particles dispersed dis·perse v. dis·persed, dis·pers·ing, dis·pers·es v.tr. 1. a. To drive off or scatter in different directions: The police dispersed the crowd. b. in a continuous thermoplastic phase. As an alloy, TPSiV combines the many unique attributes of silicone rubber, such as excellent low and high temperature performance, and selected engineering thermoplastics. The unique combination of properties results in a high performance material solution to applications where high temperature elastomeric properties and chemical resistance are required. For example, STPV materials are expected to find their utility in automotive under-the-hood applications, such as fluid systems, connector and gasket seals, boots and air ducts. STPV materials are also expected to find applications in the sports and leisure, furniture, appliance and communication industries. Four TPSiV products have been recently commercialized by Multibase. The product designations are 1180-50D, 3010-50A, 3010-60A and 3011-60A. 1180-50D is a TPV of polyamide polyamide material used in the creation of nonabsorbable, synthetic, nylon sutures. and silicone rubber. The 3000 series (3010-50A, 3010-60A and 3011-60A) are alloys of a proprietary thermoplastic and silicone rubber. The key properties and applications of each product are further discussed in this article. 1180-50D The key properties of 1180-50D, including its heat aging and fluid immersion immersion /im·mer·sion/ (i-mer´zhun) 1. the plunging of a body into a liquid. 2. the use of the microscope with the object and object glass both covered with a liquid. performance, are summarized in table 1. The combination of the continuous polyamide phase and dispersed silicone rubber domains results in a flexible material with good mechanical properties and excellent resistance to oils and chemicals. 1180-50D has excellent melt strength and drawing characteristics that make it ideal for extrusion applications. It has a continuous use temperature (CUT) of 140[degrees]C as tested according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. SAE sae abbr (BRIT) (= stamped addressed envelope) → sobre con las propias señas de uno y con sello J2236 (i.e., less than 50% loss of initial properties after aging for 1,008 hrs. at the selected temperature in air). This combination of properties makes it well suited for automotive and industrial hose applications where high temperature, oil and chemical resistance are required. 3000 series The 3000 series are soft elastomeric TPEs in the hardness range of 50 to 65 durometer A. As presented in table 2, the materials offer low compression set, low tensile tensile, adj having a degree of elasticity; having the ability to be extended or stretched. set and excellent abrasion abrasion /abra·sion/ (ah-bra´zhun) 1. a rubbing or scraping off through unusual or abnormal action; see also planing. 2. a rubbed or scraped area on skin or mucous membrane. resistance. The properties are further compared with commonly available TPEs, such as thermoplastic urethane urethane (yoor´ithān´), n ethyl carbamate used as an anesthetic agent for laboratory animals, formerly used as a hypnotic in humans. (TPU TPU - Text Processing Utility ), copolyamide (CoPA) and PP-EPDM TPV in table 3. The 3000 materials offer the lowest compression set, especially at elevated temperatures. The most important distinguishing property for STPV is its excellent high temperature performance, and all 3000 materials have a CUT of 150[degrees]C (as defined by SAE J2236). The comparative TPEs exhibit catastrophic property loss after heat aging in air under the same conditions (CoPA melts at this temperature within one hour). The 3000 series materials can be injection molded and extruded similar to conventional thermoplastics. The melt strength of the 3000 series makes them ideal candidates for free form extrusion, which is the preferred extrusion method due to the tactile tactile /tac·tile/ (tak´til) pertaining to touch. tac·tile adj. 1. Perceptible to the sense of touch; tangible. 2. Used for feeling. 3. nature of the material to metal (i.e., formers, calibrators, etc.) during fabrication. 3010-50A and 3010-60A are designed for applications that require elasticity, resilience, fatigue resistance and noise reduction. In addition to excellent high temperature performance in air, T3010-50A also exhibits good hydrolytic hy·drol·y·sis n. Decomposition of a chemical compound by reaction with water, such as the dissociation of a dissolved salt or the catalytic conversion of starch to glucose. stability as indicated by retention of its mechanical properties and hardness (less than 5% change) after immersion in water at 100[degrees]C for 1,000 hrs. 3010-60A is designed to offer improved sealing performance, in particular, sealing force retention at elevated temperatures. Figure 1 compares the compression stress relaxation Stress relaxation describes how polymers relieve stress under constant strain. Because they are viscoelastic, polymers behave in a nonlinear, non-Hookean fashion.[1] (CSR (1) (Customer Service Representative) A person who handles a customer's request regarding a bill, account changes or service or merchandise ordered. Agents in call centers are known as CSRs. See call center. , resisting force monitored for a constant strain of 25%) at 120[degrees]C of 3010-60A, a TPU of similar hardness, and two grades of liquid silicone rubber (LSR 1. (networking) LSR - Label Switching Router. 2. (operating system) LSR - Local Shared Resources. ) that are typically used in electrical connector applications. 3010-60A exhibits a sustained sealing force similar to LSR, while TPU rapidly loses its sealing force at this temperature. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] 3011-60A is a plasticizer-free TPV designed to offer good mechanical properties, such as high tear strength, excellent high temperature performance (CUT of 150[degrees]C) as well as a dry, silky silky female spirit who does household chores. [Br. Folklore: Briggs, 364–365] See : Domesticity feel. To systematically evaluate the unique soft-touch properties of 3011-60A, a trained panel of 16 individuals was used to compare the sensory attributes with competitive TPEs. Using methodology developed to compare the sensory attributes of fabrics, the panelists were trained to rank a series of materials according to their tackiness, slipperiness and the noise it generates when rubbed against itself. Figure 2 presents an example of the ranking results for a series of materials including 3011-60A, a plasticized ester TPU, a non-plasticized ether ether, in chemistry ether, any of a number of organic compounds whose molecules contain two hydrocarbon groups joined by single bonds to an oxygen atom. TPU, a CoPA (copolyamide), and a PP-EPDM TPV. For each attribute, the panelists rank the materials according to a one to five scale (one is for the material exhibiting the least amount of the attribute and five is for the material exhibiting the most amount of the attribute). The panel score for each material is then calculated according to the equation: [FIGURE 2 OMITTED] Panel score = (1)*(number of panelists ranking a material as 1) + (2)*(number of panelists ranking a material as 2) + ... + (5)*(number of panelists ranking a material as 5) In addition to comparing the panel scores, statistical analysis of the series of five materials, as well as between each pair of materials, can be completed to identify significant differences. As presented in figure 2, the soft-touch attributes of 3011-60A are clearly distinguished from the competitive TPEs as it is identified as the least tacky, most slippery and least noisy material. Thus, 3011-60A is a novel TPE solution for applications requiring a combination of soft touch and engineering performance (i.e., good mechanical properties, high temperature performance, chemical and oil resistance, etc.). Over-molding and co-molding During the last decade, there has been a growing trend in the marketplace to mold or extrude extrude /ex·trude/ (ek-strldbomacd´) 1. to force out, or to occupy a position distal to that normally occupied. 2. in dentistry, to occupy a position occlusal to that normally occupied. a soft rubber-like material over a more rigid substrate The base layer of a structure such as a chip, multichip module (MCM), printed circuit board or disk platter. Silicon is the most widely used substrate for chips. Fiberglass (FR4) is mostly used for printed circuit boards, and ceramic is used for MCMs. . This type of fabrication has been successful in applications such as tool grips, toothbrushes, footwear, electronic devices, PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) A handheld computer for managing contacts, appointments and tasks. It typically includes a name and address database, calendar, to-do list and note taker, which are the functions in a personal information manager (see PIM). enclosures and automotive under-the-hood constructions. Often, adhesives are used to achieve a strong bond between the soft material and rigid substrate. Due to the continuous thermoplastics phase, STPV products offer the flexibility of bonding to a variety of engineering thermoplastic substrates without adhesives. Generally speaking, 1180 bonds to polyamide and its blends; the 3000 series bonds to PC, ABS (Automatic Backup System) See backup program. , PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride. PVC in full polyvinyl chloride Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide. , PU and their blends. To quantitatively evaluate the bonding strength of STPVs on various engineering thermoplastic substrates, a mold (figure 4) was designed to overmold TPSiV onto a pre-molded plastic substrate. As depicted de·pict tr.v. de·pict·ed, de·pict·ing, de·picts 1. To represent in a picture or sculpture. 2. To represent in words; describe. See Synonyms at represent. in figure 4, the plastic substrate is first molded using the indicated portion of the mold (the runner shutoff shut·off n. 1. A device that shuts something off. 2. A stoppage; a cessation. is positioned to allow the flow only in the direction of the first shot). The substrate is then placed into the position indicated in figure 4, and TPSiV is overmolded onto the substrate via the flow path of the second shot (the runner shutoff is now positioned to allow flow only in this direction). The resulting part is a "T-bar" of TPSiV molded onto the plastic substrate, with a bonding area of one square inch between the materials. The bonding strength of the T-bar is tested according to a modified version of ASTM ASTM abbr. American Society for Testing and Materials D1876 (peel strength of adhesives) using a conventional tensile tester. The ultimate (i.e., at break) bonding strength of 3010-60A and 3011-60A on various plastic substrates are compared in table 4 (T-bar generated by molding TPSiV onto a "cold" substrate). Excellent bonding to PC and ABS is achieved, with a cohesive cohesive, n the capability to cohere or stick together to form a mass. bond failure observed during the test. For PA6 the bond failure is adhesive, which results in a lower bonding strength. The overmoldability of TPSiVs allows for greater design flexibility in many applications, such as overmolded seals using 3010-60A. [FIGURES 3-4 OMITTED] Closing comments Combining the benefits of engineering thermoplastics and high performance silicone rubber, TPSiV materials expand the performance scope of current TPV. These new materials exhibit thermoplastic behavior during processing and many thermoset rubber characteristics during end use applications. Their capability of withstanding oils, chemicals, temperatures and UV radiation will find them many under-the-hood applications in automotive and in certain industrial environment.
Table 1 - properties of TPSiv 1180-50D
Property Testing method
Initial
Hardness (durometer D) ASTM D2240
Tensile strength (MPa) ASTM D412, Die C
Elongation at break (%) ASTM D412, Die C
Tear strength (N/mm) ASTM D412, Die B
Flex modulus at 40[degrees]C (MPa) ASTM D4065
Change after 1,008 hrs. in air at
140[degrees]C ASTM D573-99 for
Tensile strength (%) heat aging; same methods as
Elongation at break (%) above for testing
Change after immersion in
DOT4 brake fluid at 150[degrees]C
for 168 hrs. ASTM D471-98 for
Tensile strength (%) fluid immersion; same
Elongation at break (%) methods as above for testing
Volume swell (%)
Change after immersion in automatic
transmission fluid at 127[degrees]C
for 1,008 hrs. ASTM D471-98 for
Tensile strength (%) fluid immersion; same
Elongation at break (%) methods as above for testing
Volume swell (%)
Change after immersion in reference
fuel C at 23[degrees]C for 3,024 hrs. ASTM D471-98 for
Tensile strength (%) fluid immersion; same
Elongation at break (%) methods as above for testing
Volume swell (%)
Change after immersion in water at
100[degrees]C for 1,008 hrs. ASTM D471-98 for
Tensile strength (%) fluid immersion; same
methods as above for testing
Property TPSiV 1180-50D
Initial
Hardness (durometer D) 52
Tensile strength (MPa) 24
Elongation at break (%) 207
Tear strength (N/mm) 138
Flex modulus at 40[degrees]C (MPa) 319
Change after 1,008 hrs. in air at
140[degrees]C
Tensile strength (%) -24
Elongation at break (%) -43
Change after immersion in
DOT4 brake fluid at 150[degrees]C
for 168 hrs.
Tensile strength (%) -26
Elongation at break (%) +0.4
Volume swell (%) +7.3
Change after immersion in automatic
transmission fluid at 127[degrees]C
for 1,008 hrs.
Tensile strength (%) -6.8
Elongation at break (%) +38
Volume swell (%) -23
Change after immersion in reference
fuel C at 23[degrees]C for 3,024 hrs.
Tensile strength (%) -34
Elongation at break (%) -18
Volume swell (%) +23
Change after immersion in water at
100[degrees]C for 1,008 hrs.
Tensile strength (%)
-35
Table 2 - properties of X3000 series
Property Testing method
Mechanical
Tensile strength (MPa) ASTM D412, Die D
Elongation at break (%) ASTM D412, Die D
Tear strength (N/mm) ASTM D624, Die C
Physical
Hardness (durometer A) ASTM D2240
Compression set (%) ASTM D395
23[degrees]C Method B
120[degrees]C (annealed)
Tensile set (%) ASTM D412, Die D
100%
300%
Abrasion resistance ASTM D1044 (H-
(mg loss) 18, 1,000 g, 1,000
cycles)
Property 3010-50A 3010-60A 3011-60A
Mechanical
Tensile strength (MPa) 7.1 16 12
Elongation at break (%) 473 500 720
Tear strength (N/mm) 23.5 33 44
Physical
Hardness (durometer A) 52 65 65
Compression set (%)
23[degrees]C 14 12 21
120[degrees]C (annealed) 53 41 66
Tensile set (%)
100% 5.5 6.2 10
300% 20 20 37
Abrasion resistance
(mg loss) 21 21 37
Table 3 - comparison of X3000 with competitive TPEs
Property Testing method
Mechanical
Tensile strength (MPa) ASTM D412, Die D
Elongation at break (%) ASTM D412, Die D
Tear strength (N/mm) ASTM D624, Die C
Physical
Hardness (durometer A) ASTM D2240
Compression set (%) ASTM D395
23[degrees]C Method B
120[degrees]C (annealed)
Tensile set (%)
100% ASTM D412, Die D
300%
Abrasion resistance ASTM D1044
(mg loss) (H-18, 1,000 g, 1,000 cycle)
Change after 1,008 hrs. in
air at 150[degrees]C
Hardness (durometer A units) ASTM D573-99 for heat aging
Tensile strength (%) Same methods as above for
Elongation at break (%) testing
Property 3010-50A 3011-60A TPU
Mechanical
Tensile strength (MPa) 7.1 12 23
Elongation at break (%) 473 720 870
Tear strength (N/mm) 23.5 44 51
Physical
Hardness (durometer A) 52 65 68
Compression set (%)
23[degrees]C 14 21 14
120[degrees]C (annealed) 53 66 85
Tensile set (%)
100% 5.5 10 9.3
300% 20 37 44
Abrasion resistance
(mg loss) 21 37 22
Change after 1,008 hrs. in
air at 150[degrees]C
Hardness (durometer A units) -13 -3 -35
Tensile strength (%) -44 +0.8 -92
Elongation at break (%) -36 -42 -57
Property Co-PA PP-EPDM
TPV
Mechanical
Tensile strength (MPa) 33 5.5
Elongation at break (%) 640 660
Tear strength (N/mm) 39 20
Physical
Hardness (durometer A) 75 58
Compression set (%)
23[degrees]C 20 32
120[degrees]C (annealed) 85 100
Tensile set (%)
100% 16 13
300% 120 34
Abrasion resistance
(mg loss) 161 103
Change after 1,008 hrs. in
air at 150[degrees]C
Hardness (durometer A units) CoPA >+40
Tensile strength (%) melted -60
Elongation at break (%) at 150[degrees]C -98
Table 4 - bonding strength of TPSiV to thermo-plastic
substrates (reported as ratio of peak
force and bonding width)
Ulitmate bond strength (N/mm)
Material PC ABS PA6
3010-60A 22.0 23.1 6.05
3011-60A 15.9 18.2 12.0
References 1. "Thermoplastic silicone elastomers," U.S. Patent 6013715, 2000. 2. "Thermoplastic silicone elastomers formed from nylon resins," U.S. Patent 6362287, 2002. 3. "Thermoplastic silicone elastomers from compatibilized polyamide resins," U.S. Patent 6362288, 2002. 4. "Thermoplastic silicone elastomers formed from polyester resins Polyester Resin - Unsaturated Polyester Resin. The term generally used for unsaturated (means containing chemical double bonds) resins formed by the reaction of dibasic organic acids and polyhydric alcohols, basic component of SMC/BMC. ," U.S. Patent 6417293, 2002. 5. M. Rosenzweig, Modern Plastics, December 2001, p. 48. |
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