Use of mid- and near-infrared techniques as tools for characterizing blends of copolymers of styrene–butadiene and acrylonitrile–butadiene
Journal of applied polymer science ,
v.88 no.7 ,
2003년, pp.1653 - 1658
Shield, Stephanie R.
(Research and Development Center, Ameripol Synpol Corporation, 1215 Main Street, Port Neches, Texas 77651)
,
Ghebremeskel, Ghebrehiwet N.
(Research and Development Center, Ameripol Synpol Corporation, 1215 Main Street, Port Neches, Texas 77651)
There is increased technological interest in using blends of various dissimilar elastomers in applications for which service, material availability, or cost of a single elastomer do not provide the necessary processing, vulcanizate, or economic properties. The properties of these polyblends are sens...
There is increased technological interest in using blends of various dissimilar elastomers in applications for which service, material availability, or cost of a single elastomer do not provide the necessary processing, vulcanizate, or economic properties. The properties of these polyblends are sensitive to small variations in the amounts of the individual polymers used. Accurately estimating the elastomer composition of blends is of vital importance to the elastomer industry. This study illustrates the feasibility of using mid-infrared (MIR) and near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy to estimate the amount of styrene–butadiene and acrylonitrile–butadiene copolymers in blends composed of varying ratios of the two elastomers. Sometimes it is difficult to obtain a film of an elastomer amenable to IR analysis; to address this problem, several techniques were developed in this study [MIR transmission of a film, attenuated total internal reflection (ATR)-FTIR of a chunk, and NIR using a fiber-optic probe]. A plot of the absorbance ratio (absorbance of the characteristic peak for styrene–butadiene rubber or acrylonitrile–butadiene rubber/absorbance of the C&n.dbond;C stretching vibration of polybutadiene) versus the amount of each elastomer in the blend was used to predict the blend composition. In addition, the blends were also characterized by ATR-FTIR using a plot of the characteristic peak absorbance versus the polymeric content for a series of standards. A partial least-squares algorithm was used to develop a calibration curve for the NIR region. Finally, the accuracy of the test methods developed in this work is compared to results obtained by pyrolysis-GC/MS and thermogravimetric analysis. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 88:1653–1658, 2003
There is increased technological interest in using blends of various dissimilar elastomers in applications for which service, material availability, or cost of a single elastomer do not provide the necessary processing, vulcanizate, or economic properties. The properties of these polyblends are sensitive to small variations in the amounts of the individual polymers used. Accurately estimating the elastomer composition of blends is of vital importance to the elastomer industry. This study illustrates the feasibility of using mid-infrared (MIR) and near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy to estimate the amount of styrene–butadiene and acrylonitrile–butadiene copolymers in blends composed of varying ratios of the two elastomers. Sometimes it is difficult to obtain a film of an elastomer amenable to IR analysis; to address this problem, several techniques were developed in this study [MIR transmission of a film, attenuated total internal reflection (ATR)-FTIR of a chunk, and NIR using a fiber-optic probe]. A plot of the absorbance ratio (absorbance of the characteristic peak for styrene–butadiene rubber or acrylonitrile–butadiene rubber/absorbance of the C&n.dbond;C stretching vibration of polybutadiene) versus the amount of each elastomer in the blend was used to predict the blend composition. In addition, the blends were also characterized by ATR-FTIR using a plot of the characteristic peak absorbance versus the polymeric content for a series of standards. A partial least-squares algorithm was used to develop a calibration curve for the NIR region. Finally, the accuracy of the test methods developed in this work is compared to results obtained by pyrolysis-GC/MS and thermogravimetric analysis. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 88:1653–1658, 2003
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