6533b828fe1ef96bd12890b7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Long-term ISO 23936-2 sweet oil ageing of HNBR

Ben AlcockAndreas T. EchtermeyerAnton AkulichevA. TiwariAndrey E. KrauklisAndrey E. KrauklisAndrey E. Krauklis

subject

Materials sciencePolymers and PlasticsISO 23936-2Organic Chemistry:Plast- og komposittmaterialer: 523 [VDP]Compression setViscoelasticityContext (language use)Material degradationDynamic mechanical analysisHNBRThermal expansion:Polymer and plastics: 523 [VDP]TP1080-1185ddc:540Stress relaxationShore durometerPolymers and polymer manufactureComposite materialGlass transitionSweet oil ageingElastic modulus

description

Abstract A hydrogenated nitrile butadiene rubber (HNBR) compound is subjected to ageing in a simulated oil and gas environment in accordance with ISO 23936-2 standard at two elevated temperatures (130 °C and 150 °C) for a period of up to 9 months. Shore D hardness, thermal expansion, dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, compression and compression set (CS) measurements are made before and after the chemical exposure. The hardness, modulus at short times, degree of relaxation and CS increases while the coefficient of thermal expansion in HNBR tends to decrease with ageing time and temperature. Temperature is shown to impose a greater effect on the properties than ageing time in the experiment. The elastic modulus at low frequencies of cyclic deformation (or the equilibrium modulus in stress relaxation) has a more complicated relationship with ageing time at 150 °C. It sharply increases in the first stage of ageing and then decreases later with further exposure which suggests that chain scission dominates in the later stages of hydrocarbon ageing. In contrast with the other materials, the most severely aged HNBR exhibits a much higher glass transition temperature of ≈  +70 °C manifesting in a very high stiffness at ambient temperature and a low thermal expansion coefficient. This effect is attributed to a dramatic change in the chemical structure of aged HNBR, i.e. complete modification of C ≡ N groups to amide groups yielding the growth of T g and the corresponding variation in macroscopic properties. These results are also qualitatively evaluated in the context of potential sealing applications of the material.

https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2976762