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Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options

Tires are an important vehicle component, as car handling, safety and fuel economy depend for a major part on the tire composition and construction. As a consequence, tires are improved continuously. The most prominent improvement in the recent past was the use of a silica-silane filler system in pa...

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Autores principales: van Hoek, Johannes W., Heideman, Geert, Noordermeer, Jacques W. M., Dierkes, Wilma K., Blume, Anke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6427782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30832290
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12050725
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author van Hoek, Johannes W.
Heideman, Geert
Noordermeer, Jacques W. M.
Dierkes, Wilma K.
Blume, Anke
author_facet van Hoek, Johannes W.
Heideman, Geert
Noordermeer, Jacques W. M.
Dierkes, Wilma K.
Blume, Anke
author_sort van Hoek, Johannes W.
collection PubMed
description Tires are an important vehicle component, as car handling, safety and fuel economy depend for a major part on the tire composition and construction. As a consequence, tires are improved continuously. The most prominent improvement in the recent past was the use of a silica-silane filler system in passenger car tread compounds, instead of traditionally used carbon black. For recycling and re-use of end-of-life car tire rubber one of the most promising recycling methods is devulcanization: re-plasticizing the vulcanized rubber by selectively breaking the sulfur bridges between the polymer molecules. In the present paper, the influence of silica, which is present in the passenger car tires granulate, on both devulcanization and subsequent revulcanization, is investigated. In a step-wise approach it is shown that the presence of silica influences both devulcanization and revulcanization. The best tensile strength of the revulcanizate, using a carbon-black-based revulcanization formulation, was 5 MPa. This could be improved to 6.5 MPa by using 2.8 phr of 1,3-DiPhenylGuanidine (DPG) in the revulcanization formulation. After addition of a silanization step during revulcanization by adding 3.2 phr bis[3-(TriEthoxySilyl)Propyl] Tetrasulfide (TESPT), a silane, to the formulation, the tensile strength of the revulcanizate was further improved to 8 MPa. With these results it is shown that the silica in the granulate can be used to improve the revulcanization properties. To check the benefits of using pure tire tread material for the devulcanization and subsequent revulcanization, of both a carbon black and a silica-based virgin tread compound, it is shown that a tensile strength of the revulcanizate of 13 MPa can be reached. This shows the potential of devulcanized rubber when the various tire components are separated before whole car tire material is granulated as the beginning of the recycling.
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spelling pubmed-64277822019-04-10 Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options van Hoek, Johannes W. Heideman, Geert Noordermeer, Jacques W. M. Dierkes, Wilma K. Blume, Anke Materials (Basel) Article Tires are an important vehicle component, as car handling, safety and fuel economy depend for a major part on the tire composition and construction. As a consequence, tires are improved continuously. The most prominent improvement in the recent past was the use of a silica-silane filler system in passenger car tread compounds, instead of traditionally used carbon black. For recycling and re-use of end-of-life car tire rubber one of the most promising recycling methods is devulcanization: re-plasticizing the vulcanized rubber by selectively breaking the sulfur bridges between the polymer molecules. In the present paper, the influence of silica, which is present in the passenger car tires granulate, on both devulcanization and subsequent revulcanization, is investigated. In a step-wise approach it is shown that the presence of silica influences both devulcanization and revulcanization. The best tensile strength of the revulcanizate, using a carbon-black-based revulcanization formulation, was 5 MPa. This could be improved to 6.5 MPa by using 2.8 phr of 1,3-DiPhenylGuanidine (DPG) in the revulcanization formulation. After addition of a silanization step during revulcanization by adding 3.2 phr bis[3-(TriEthoxySilyl)Propyl] Tetrasulfide (TESPT), a silane, to the formulation, the tensile strength of the revulcanizate was further improved to 8 MPa. With these results it is shown that the silica in the granulate can be used to improve the revulcanization properties. To check the benefits of using pure tire tread material for the devulcanization and subsequent revulcanization, of both a carbon black and a silica-based virgin tread compound, it is shown that a tensile strength of the revulcanizate of 13 MPa can be reached. This shows the potential of devulcanized rubber when the various tire components are separated before whole car tire material is granulated as the beginning of the recycling. MDPI 2019-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6427782/ /pubmed/30832290 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12050725 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
van Hoek, Johannes W.
Heideman, Geert
Noordermeer, Jacques W. M.
Dierkes, Wilma K.
Blume, Anke
Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title_full Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title_fullStr Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title_full_unstemmed Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title_short Implications of the Use of Silica as Active Filler in Passenger Car Tire Compounds on Their Recycling Options
title_sort implications of the use of silica as active filler in passenger car tire compounds on their recycling options
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6427782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30832290
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma12050725
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