WO1987007625A1 - Dynamically cured thermoplastic olefin polymers (e-76) - Google Patents

Dynamically cured thermoplastic olefin polymers (e-76) Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1987007625A1
WO1987007625A1 PCT/US1986/001214 US8601214W WO8707625A1 WO 1987007625 A1 WO1987007625 A1 WO 1987007625A1 US 8601214 W US8601214 W US 8601214W WO 8707625 A1 WO8707625 A1 WO 8707625A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
rubber
composition
ethylene
ethylene copolymer
copolymer resin
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1986/001214
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Donald Ross Hazelton
Robert Chester Puydak
Original Assignee
Exxon Research And Engineering Company
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Exxon Research And Engineering Company filed Critical Exxon Research And Engineering Company
Priority to PCT/US1986/001214 priority Critical patent/WO1987007625A1/en
Priority to AU59910/86A priority patent/AU607394B2/en
Priority to DE19863687906 priority patent/DE3687906T2/en
Priority to JP50338486A priority patent/JPH01502594A/en
Priority to EP19860903959 priority patent/EP0310599B1/en
Publication of WO1987007625A1 publication Critical patent/WO1987007625A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L11/00Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of chloroprene
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L23/00Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbons having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
    • C08L23/02Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbons having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers not modified by chemical after-treatment
    • C08L23/04Homopolymers or copolymers of ethene
    • C08L23/08Copolymers of ethene
    • C08L23/0846Copolymers of ethene with unsaturated hydrocarbons containing other atoms than carbon or hydrogen atoms
    • C08L23/0853Vinylacetate
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L23/00Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbons having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
    • C08L23/26Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbons having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers modified by chemical after-treatment
    • C08L23/28Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbons having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers modified by chemical after-treatment by reaction with halogens or compounds containing halogen
    • C08L23/283Halogenated homo- or copolymers of iso-olefins
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L2205/00Polymer mixtures characterised by other features
    • C08L2205/03Polymer mixtures characterised by other features containing three or more polymers in a blend

Definitions

  • TPO Thermoplastic Olefins
  • compositions comprising polypropylene and a rubber wherein the rubber can be, inter alia, butyl rubber, chlorinated butyl rubber, polybutadiene, polychloroprene and polyisobutene. Compositions of about 50 to 95 parts polypropylene and about 5 to 50 parts of rubber are disclosed.
  • U.S. Patent Nos. 3,758,643 and 3,806,558 disclose TPO type polymers comprising an olefin resin and olefin copolymer rubber wherein the rubber is dynamically cured to a partial cure state. These compositions are reprocessible and result in molded products having good surface appear ⁇ ance. However, the potential applications of these products is limited because of high compression set and/or low softening temperatures resulting from only a partial cure of the rubber. Furthermore, the partial peroxide cure utilized is difficult to control from the standpoint of completeness of reaction, resulting in batch to batch variations in product properties.
  • U.S. Patent 4,130,534 discloses TPO blends which comprise a polyolefin resin and a butyl rubber wherein the blend comprises up to 60 vtt% of polyolefin resin and 40 wt& or more of a rubber.
  • the butyl rubbers which can be utilized include butyl rubber per se as well as chlorinated or brominated butyl rubber.
  • the polyolefin resin comprises 20 to 45 wt ⁇ of the blend and the rubber comprises about 80 to 55 wtS. of the blend.
  • the rubber is said to be fully cured, the cure being a dynamic vulcanization.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,130,535 discloses TPO composi ⁇ tions wherein the rubber component is an ethylene propylene copolymer ("EPM") or terpolymer (“EPDM").
  • the preferred thermoplastic polyolefin resins are polypropylene and polyethylene.
  • the compositions comprise about 75 to about 25 wtS ⁇ polyolefin resin and about 25 to about 75 wtJS rubber. The rubber is dynamically cured to a fully cured state.
  • Similar compositions are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,311,628 wherein the cure system for the rubber is a metal activated halo resin cure, e.g., brominated dimethylol phenol resins.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,409,365 discloses TPO composi ⁇ tions in which a polyolefin resin is combined with an EPDM and a nitrile rubber. The rubbers are vulcanized and the product is said to have improved oil resistance.
  • U.S. Patent No. 3,081,279 discloses compositions wherein a rubber such as butyl rubber is combined with a sul fochlorinated polyolefin resin and cured. The uncured blend is said to have improved processing characteristics.
  • U.S. Patent No. 2,369,471 discloses blends of ethylene polymers with various hydrocarbon rubbers and halogenated rubbers. The compositions are either uncured or compression molded vulcanizates.
  • U.S. Patent 4,302,557 discloses a shrink film which comprises an EPM or EPDM rubber and a low density polyethylene or soft ethylene copolymer such as ethylene vinylacetate.
  • the polymer blends can include polypropylene or high density polyethylene (HDPE).
  • Another variant of the disclosed composition comprises the ethylene copolymer rubber with the polypropylene or HDPE. The rubber can be unvulcanized or, in the alternative a film of the blend is prepared and radiation cross-linked to form a heat shrinkable film.
  • U.S. Patent 4,212,787 discloses a combination of a peroxide curable rubber and a peroxide decomposible poly ⁇ olefin resin which may, alternatively have incorporated therein a non-peroxide curable rubber such as polyisobuty- . lene.
  • the peroxide curable rubber is preferably an ethylene propylene rubber (EPR) and the peroxide decomposible polymer is preferably polypropylene.
  • EPR ethylene propylene rubber
  • the curable rubber is par ⁇ tially cured in the manner of U.S. Patent 3,866,558, supra.
  • the partial curing can be carried out in the presence of divinyl benzene.
  • the product is said to have improved flexibility and rebound elasticity.
  • compositions comprise about 100 to 5 parts by weight of a partially cured elastomer which is prepared by the dynamic heat treatment in the presence of a peroxide of a mixture of 100 to 40 parts by weight of (a) peroxide-curable olefin copolymer rubber and 0 to 60 parts by weight of (b) a peroxide-decomposible olefin plastic; and 5 to 100 parts of at least one (c) peroxide non-curable hydrocarbon rubber.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,202,801 discloses dynamically partially cured blends of EPM or EPDM with a resin (poly ⁇ ethylene or polypropylene) and a conjugated diene rubber, e.g., polychloroprene.
  • composition is a typical TPO. While polychloroprene is disclosed as one of the conjugated diene rubbers, it is one of many rubbers disclosed, and no preference is taught nor do any examples illustrate the use of polychloroprene or any benefit derived therefrom.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,348,266 discloses, inter alia, an elastoplastic composition which can comprise 20-45 parts of polyethylene and 80 to 55 parts of polychloroprene. The preferred embodiment is cured by irradiation. A comparison is made' with a control which is chemically cured by dynam ⁇ ically vulcanizing a PE/polychloroprene blend wherein the curative system is Z ⁇ O, benzo hiazyldisulfide and -phenylene bismaleimide.
  • TPO compositions have been prepared, utiliz ⁇ ing a thermoplastic 'polyolefin resin in conjunction with a rubber.
  • U.S. Patent 4,104,210 discloses compositions wherein the rubber is a diolefin rubber, e.g., natural rubber, polyisoprene, nit ' rile rubber or styrene butadiene rubber. The rubber is fully cured.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,211,- 049 discloses particular curatives for the TPO compositions containing diolefin rubbers, e.g., phenolic curatives, urethane curatives and certain sulfur donor curatives.
  • U.S. Patent 4,141,878 discloses TPO compositions wherein the rubber is cross-linked chlorosulfonated polyethylene.
  • compositions of the prior art are either compositions in which the rubber component is uncured or partially cured and have low tensile strength and high compression set or are compositions containing a fully cured rubber portion and consequently are high in hardness and have poor flow characteristics when injection molded, resulting in flow lines in the finished product.
  • the resins are generally polyethy ⁇ lene or polypropylene.
  • U.S. Patent No. 3,407,253 discloses a blend of a crystalline polyolefin, e.g., polypropylene with a rubber, e.g., butyl rubber which is alleged to have voids when the polyolefin is stretched.
  • the elastomer is unvulcanized .
  • the product is non-transparent and has a leather like feel.
  • U.S. Patent No. 3,597,372 discloses a blend of a thermoplastic and a rubber, e.g., polypropylene with neoprene.
  • the rubber is cross-linked by chemical means or with irradiation.
  • the composition when formed into articles and cured, exhibits shrink properties.
  • U.S. Patent 3,701 ,702 discloses compositions of about 2 to about 30 wtSS of a fiber forming thermoplastic resin, e.g., polypropylene and an elastomer, e.g., poly ⁇ chloroprene.
  • the resin and elastomer are thoroughly blended above the melting point of the resin, cooled below the melting point of the resin and curatives added.
  • the " composi ⁇ tion is then shaped and free cured without pressure restraint.
  • U.S. Patent No. 3,965,055 discloses blends of vulcanizable rubbers with a resin, e.g., polypropylene.
  • the vulcanizable rubbers can include polychloroprene and butyl rubber blends.
  • the resin is dispersed throughout the continuous rubber phase and has a particle size of cross section of about 0.5 microns or less and an L/D ratio of at least 2.
  • the compositions can be blended with curatives, formed and vulcanized by free curing without pressure restraint .
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,005,054 discloses a vulcanizable composition comprising a resin and a rubber wherein the resin can be polypropylene and the rubber can be polychloro ⁇ prene.
  • the composition is processed so that the resin is formed into fibrils of less than 5 microns in diameter. The product is said to resist elongation in one direction.
  • thermoplastic olefin resin e.g., ethylene vinyl acetate, ethylene methyl acrylate, etc.
  • rubbers halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene.
  • the rubbers are blended with the resin and dynamically cured, preferably using a ZnO containing cure system.
  • compositions exhibit exceptional resilience and low tension set as well as unusually low hardness, properties quite unusual for dynamically vulcanized composi ⁇ tions. They are useful in various molded and extruded articles, including seals, gaskets, clamped hose, etc.
  • This invention relates to improved TPO composi ⁇ tions.
  • the vulcanization or curing (i.e., crossli ⁇ king) of the rubber is accomplished by dynamic vulcanization .
  • dynamic vulcanization means a vulcanization process for effecting crosslinking of a rubber-containing TPO composi ⁇ tion wherein the rubber is vulcanized under conditions of high shear. As a . result, the rubber is simul aneously crosslinked and dispersed as fine particles of a "micro-gel" within a polyolefin matrix. Dynamic vulcanization is effected by mixing the TPO ingredients at a temperature which is at or above the curing temperature of the rubber in equipment such as roll mills, Banbury mixers, continuous mixers, kneaders or mixing extruders, e.g., twin screw extruders.
  • compositions can be . processed and reprocessed by conventional rubber and/or thermoplastic processing techniques such as extrusion, injection molding, compression molding, etc. Scrap or flashing can be salvaged and reprocessed.
  • DVA dynamically vulcanized alloy
  • the term "dynamically vulcanized alloy” (DVA) as used in the specification and claims means a composition comprising a thermoplastic resin and a rubber wherein the rubber component has been dynamically vulcanized to a fully cured state.
  • the compositions are generally prepared by blending together the polyolefin resin and rubbers with curatives and fillers under conditions of dynamic vulcaniza ⁇ tion.
  • curatives and fillers under conditions of dynamic vulcaniza ⁇ tion.
  • at least one ethylene copolymer polyolefin resin is blended with a halogenated butyl rubber and a polychloroprene rubber.
  • ethylene copolymer resin as used in the specification and claims means copolymers of ethylene with an alkyl ester of an alpha, beta monoethylenically unsatu- rated monocarboxylic acid as well as copolymers with the acid per se .
  • copolymers of ethylene with vinylacetate or alkyl acrylates for example methyl acry- late, (EMA), butyl acrylate (EBA), and ethyl acrylate (EEA) can be employed.
  • ethylene copolymers typically comprise about 70 to about 98 wt5o ethylene, preferably about 70 to 95 wt& ethylene, more preferably about 71 to about 91 wtSo ethylene, e.g., about 72 to about 85 wtS ⁇ ethylene the balance of copolymer being the alkyl ester.
  • EVA means, specifically ethylene-vi ⁇ ylacetate copolymers.
  • the ethylene-copolymer resins- suitable for use in the practice of this invention have a melt index of about 0.2 to about 500 (ASTM D 1238 Condition E) .
  • polyolefin resins such as high density polyethylene, polypropylene and reactor copolymers of polypropylene can optionally be blended in limited amounts with the ethylene copolymer resin to the extent that such other polyolefin resins do not detract from the desirable high resilience and low hardness of the preferred composi ⁇ tions.
  • the use of such other polyolefin resins can increase the high temperature resistance of the resulting blends.
  • limited amounts of other polyolefin homopolymers and copolymers can be optionally utilized in combination with ethylene copolymer resin in the practice of this invention if desired, e.g., low density polyethylene, linear low density polyethylene and polybutylene.
  • the rubbers which can be used in the practice of this invention are halogenated butyl rubber and polychloro ⁇ prene.
  • Halogenated buty rubber is typically prepared from butyl rubber.
  • Butyl rubber is a copolymer of an isoolefin and a conjugated ultiolefin.
  • the useful copolymers comprise a major portion of isoolefin and a minor amount, preferably not more than 30 wt35, of a conjugated multiolefin.
  • the preferred copolymers comprise about 85-99.5 wt3 (preferably 95-99.5 wt%) of a C -C7 isoolefin, such as isobutylene, and about 15-0.5 wtSS (preferably about 5-0.5 wtS) of a multi ⁇ olefin of about 4-14 carbon atoms.
  • a C -C7 isoolefin such as isobutylene
  • 15-0.5 wtSS preferably about 5-0.5 wtS
  • butyl rubber as used in the specification and claims includes the aforementioned copolymers of an isoolefin having 4-7 carbon atoms and about 0.5 to 20 vtt% of a conjugated multiolefin of about 4-10 carbon atoms. Preferably these copolymers contain about 0.5 to about 5% conjugated multiolefin.
  • the preferred isoolefin is isobutylene. Suitable conjugated multiolefin's include isoprene, butadiene, dimethyl butadiene, piperylene, etc.
  • butyl rubber is a copolymer of iso ⁇ butylene and minor amounts of isoprene. It is generally prepared in a slurry process using methyl chloride as a vehicle and a Friedel-Crafts catalyst as the polymerization initiator.
  • the methyl chloride offers the advantage that AICI3, a relatively inexpensive Friedel-Crafts catalyst is soluble in it, as are the isobutylene and isoprene comono- mers.
  • the butyl rubber polymer is insoluble in the methyl chloride and precipitates out of solution as fine particles. The polymerization is generally carried out at temperatures of about -90°C to -100°C. See U.S. Patent Nos. 2,356,128 and 2,356,129 incorporated herein by reference.
  • the polymerization process which is typically carried out in a draft tube reactor, is continuous. Monomer feed and catalyst are continuously introduced at the bottom of the draft tube where an axial flow pump is located. The pump circulates the slurry at high velocity to provide efficient mixing and heat transfer. Polymer slurry contain ⁇ ing about 20-30 tSS butyl rubber continuously overflows from the reactor through a transfer line.
  • the slurry is fed through the transfer line to a flash drum operated at about 140-180Pa (1.38-1.58 atm) and 65-75°C. Steam and hot water are mixed with the slurry in a nozzle as it enters the drum to vaporize methyl chloride and unreacted monomers which pass overhead are recovered, and the polymer is finished by water removal and drying.
  • a flash drum operated at about 140-180Pa (1.38-1.58 atm) and 65-75°C.
  • Steam and hot water are mixed with the slurry in a nozzle as it enters the drum to vaporize methyl chloride and unreacted monomers which pass overhead are recovered, and the polymer is finished by water removal and drying.
  • a halogenated butyl rubber this can be accomplished by preparing a solution of the rubber. Of course, any halogenation technique may be utilized.
  • a "solvent replacement”, process is utilized.
  • Cold butyl rubber slurry in methyl chloride from the polymerization reactor is passed to an agitated solution in a drum containing liquid hexane.
  • Hot hexane vapors are introduced to flash overhead, the methyl chloride diluent and unreacted monomers. Dissolution of the fine slurry particles occurs rapidly.
  • the resulting solution is stripped to remove traces of methyl chloride and monomers, and brought to the desired concentration for halogenation by flash concentration.
  • Hexane recovered from the flash concentration step is condensed and returned to the solution drum.
  • the ethylene copolymer resin component of the DVA composition of this invention comprises about 25 to about 100 wtSo of ethylene copolymer resin; preferably about 35 to about 100 wt%; more preferably about 45 to about 100 wt&, e.g., 45 to about 90 wt5S. Blends of EVA with EMA and or EEA may also be used.
  • the optional af oredescribed polyolefin resins and other polyolefin homopolymers and copolymers which can be blended with the ethylene copolymer resin comprise about 0 to 75 wtSS of the ethylene copolymer resin component of the DVA.
  • the optional resin When the optional resin is used, it is preferably incorporated into the blend at about 10 to about 55 wtS5; more preferably about 15 to about 35 t£ of the ethylene copolymer resin component is the optional resin.
  • ethylene vinyl acetate is used alone as the ethylene copoly ⁇ mer resin.
  • the ethylene copolymer resin, the halogenated butyl rubber and the polychloroprene are preferably utilized in • substantially equal proportions.
  • substantially equal propor ⁇ tions as used in the specification and claims with respect to the ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers means that each- of the rubbers are incorporated in the DVA at about 90 to 110 wtS ⁇ based on the ethylene copolymer resin (e.g. , EVA) fraction of the polymer blend. For example, where the EVA is present in the DVA at about 20 wtS.
  • the halogenated butyl rubber and the polychloroprene can each be present at about 18 to about 22 vtt%.
  • polymer blend as used in the specification and claims means the blend of ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers.
  • the polychloroprene rubber is the primary contrib ⁇ utor to oil resistance and enhances resilience of the DVA composition of this invention. It should comprise at least 35 wt% of the halogenated butyl rubber plus polychloroprene rubber.
  • polychloroprene is not ordinari ⁇ ly compatible with ethylene copolymer resins while haloge- nated butyl rubber is.
  • the halogenated butyl rubber serves to "compatibilize" the polychloroprene with the ethylene copolymer resin and should be present at a level of at least 25 wtS based on the total rubber.
  • the halogenated butyl rubber can comprise about 25 to about 65 wtft of the total rubber in the DVA composition.
  • each of the rubbers comprise about 35 to about 65 wt& of the total rubber.
  • the polymer blend comprises about 40 to about 80 wtS ⁇ of the overall DVA composition.
  • Each component of the polymer blend can comprise about 12 to about 35 wt& of the DVA.
  • each of the rubbers and the ethylene copolymer resin comprise about 13 to about 32 wtS ⁇ of the DVA composition, more preferably- about 15 to about 30 wtS ⁇ of the DVA, most preferably about 16 to about 28 wtS ⁇ , e.g., about 18 to about 22 wt£.
  • the DVA composition of this invention can include fillers, antioxi- dants, stabilizers, rubber processing oils, lubricants (e.g., olea ide), antiblocking agents, waxes, foaming agents, pigments, coupling agents for the fillers and other processing aids known to the rubber and plastics compounding art.
  • lubricants e.g., olea ide
  • antiblocking agents e.g., olea ide
  • waxes e.g., olea ide
  • foaming agents e.g., foaming agents
  • pigments e.g., coupling agents for the fillers and other processing aids known to the rubber and plastics compounding art.
  • Metal oxides e.g., MgO
  • the pigments and fillers can comprise up to 30 wtSJ of the total DVA composition based on polymer component plus additives.
  • the filler comprises about 5 to about 30 wtS ⁇ based on the DVA composition, more prefera ⁇ bly about 7 to about 28 wtJ ⁇ , e.g., about 8 to about 25 wtS. of the overall composition.
  • Fillers can be inorganic fillers such as calcium carbonate, clays, silica or carbon black. Any type of carbon black can be used, such as channel blacks, furnace blacks, thermal blacks, acetylene black, lamp black and the like.
  • Rubber process oils have particular ASTM designa ⁇ tions depending on whether they fall into the class of paraffinic, naphthenic or aromatic process oils.
  • the type of process oil utilized will be that customarily used in conjunction with the rubber component. The skilled rubber chemist will recognize which type of oil should be utilized with a particular rubber.
  • the quantity of rubber process oil utilized is based on the total rubber content, and can be defined as the ratio, by weight, of process oil to the rubber in the DVA which is to be dynamically vulcanized. This ratio can vary from 0.1/1 to about 1.3/1; preferably about 0.2/1 to about 1/1; more preferably about 0.3/1 to about 0.75/1. Oils other' than petroleum based oils such as oils derived from coal tar and pine tar can also be utilized.
  • process oil means both the petroleum derived process oils and synthetic plasticizers.
  • the process oil is a desirable ingredient of the DVA where it is necessary to insure that the DVA has good flow properties, e.g., spiral test flow reading greater than about 8 cm., preferably greater than about 15 cm., particu ⁇ larly where the composition is to be used for injection molding.
  • the quantity of oil utilized will depend in part on the amount of polymer blend, the type of ethylene copolymer resin and filler used as well as, to some extent, the type of cure system utilized.
  • the process oil will comprise about 10 to about 35 wt!5, e.g., about 13 to about 30 wtSS of the DVA. Larger amounts of process oil can be used, the deficit being reduced physical strength of the DVA.
  • the process oil content of the DVA can be increased or reduced proportionately depending on the contribution of the flow characteristics of the optional resin as well as the strength and other properties desired.
  • Antioxidants can be utilized in the composition of this invention - the particular antioxidant utilized will depend on the rubbers and plastics utilized and more than one type may be required. Their proper selection is well within the skill of the practitioner in this field. Antioxi ⁇ dants will generally fall into the class of chemical or physical protect ant ' s . Physical protectants are used where there is to be little movement in the part to be manufactur ⁇ ed from the composition. These are generally waxy materials which impart a "bloom" to the surface of the rubber part and form a protective coating or shield the part from oxygen, ozone, etc. The physical protectants include mixed petroleum waxes and microcrystalline waxes.
  • the chemical protectants generally fall into three chemical groups: secondary amines, phenolics and phos ⁇ phites.
  • Illustrative, non-limiting examples of types of antioxidants useful in the practice of this invention are hindered phenols, amino phenols, hydroquinones , alkyl- diamines, amine condensation products, etc.
  • Non-limiting examples of these and other types of antioxidants are styrenated phenol; 2, 2' -methylene-bis-(4-methyl-6-1 , butyl- phenol); 2,6' -di-t-butyl-o-dimethyl-amino-p-cresol; hydro- quinone m ⁇ nobenzyl ether, octylated diphenyl amine, phenyl- beta-naphthlyamine; N,N' -di-phenyle thylene diamine; aldol- alpha-naphthylamine ; N , N ' -di-phenyl-p-phenyle ⁇ e diamine, etc.
  • any conventional cure system for the rubber to be dynamically vulcanized can be used except that peroxide cures should be used with caution since they can crosslink the ethylene copolymer resin and thereby reduce thermoplas- ticity and they can depolymerize polypropylene where the latter is included as an optional ingredient.
  • any of the curatives or cure systems known in the art for the vulcanization or curing (i.e., crosslinking) of conju ⁇ gated diene rubbers are suitable. These include sulfur cures as well as non-sulfur cures. For example, halogenated butyl rubber can be cured using zinc oxide alone.
  • accelerators such as dithiocarbamates, thiura s, diamines and thioureas can be included in these zinc oxide cures.
  • Zinc oxide free cures of halogenated butyl rubber known to the art can be utilized.
  • one such vulcaniz ⁇ ing system comprises litharge, 2-mercaptoimidazoline and diphenyl guanidine.
  • Resin cures can be used for halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene rubber.
  • the resins useful as curatives are phenolic resins, brominated phenolic resins, urethane resins, etc.
  • phenolic resin cures are suitable cures, they impart a yellowish or orangish tinge to the rubber part.
  • a preferred cure is one based on ZnO and/or MgO. Such cures permit the use of pigments such as Ti ⁇ 2 to give bright white compositions.
  • the MgO acts primarily not as an accelerator, but as an acid acceptor to stabilize the rubber from dehaloge ⁇ ation.
  • the halogenated rubber to be vulcanized is chlorinated or brominated butyl rubber.
  • Halogenated butyl rubbers are vulcanized with zinc oxide cures.
  • Sulfur-bearing accelerators can be utilized with the zinc oxide.
  • Illustrative of accelerators which can be used in conjunction with ZnO for curing halogenated butyl rubber are brominated alkyl phenol resin; N, N • -diethylthiourea; di-ortho-(tolyl)guanidine salt of dicatechol borate; dipentamethylene thiuram tetrasulfide ethylene trithiocarba- mate; 2-mercapt o-benzothiazole ; benzo thiazole disulfide; tetra methyl thiuram disulfide, zinc diethyldithiocarbamate , zinc dibutyldithiocarbamate, and zinc dimethyldithiocarbam- ate.
  • Formulations for the ZnO cure of halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene are well known in the art.
  • a preferred cure system comprises MgO, ZnO and zinc diethyl ⁇ dithiocarbamate since this system results in a vulcanized rubber with low compression set.
  • the ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers are mixed together at a tempera ⁇ ture sufficient to soften the resin or, more commonly, at a temperature above its melting point where the resin is crystalline at room temperature.
  • the curative is added. Heating and masticating at vulcanization or curing tempera ⁇ tures are generally adequate to complete vulcanization in about 0.5 to abou ' t 10 minutes.
  • the vulcanization time can be reduced by elevating the temperature of vulcanization.
  • a suitable range of vulcanization temperatures is from about the melting point of the ethylene copolymer resin (about 90°C depending on the co-monomer content) to about 225°C; more typically, the temperature range is about 120°C to about 200°C.
  • the vulcanization is carried out at a temperature of about 150°C to about 190°C.
  • the mixing process be continued until vulcanization is complete. If vulcanization is permitted to continue after mixing has stopped, the composition will not be reprocessible as a thermoplastic.
  • the dynamic vulcanization can be carried out in stages. For example, vulcanization can be commenced in a twin screw extruder and pellets formed of the DVA material using an underwater pelletizer thereby quenching the vulcanization before it is complete. It can be completed at a later time under dynamic vulcanization conditions.
  • Those skilled in the art will appreciate the appropriate quanti ⁇ ties, types of curatives and extent of mixing time - required to carry out the vulcanization of the rubber. Where necessary, the rubber alone can be vulcanized using varying • amounts of curative to determine the optimum cure system to be utilized and the appropriate cure conditions to achieve a full cure.
  • the rubber to be cured can be dynamically vulcanized in the presence of some or all of the ethylene copolymer resin. This blend can then be let down into additional ethylene copolymer and/or optional resin. Similarly, it is not necessary to add all of the fillers and oil prior to dynamic vulcanization. Some or all of the fillers and oil can be added after dynamic vulcanization is complete.
  • the term "fully vulcanized" as used in the specifications and claims with respect to the dynamically vulcanized rubber component of this invention means that the rubber component to be vulcanized has been cured to a state in which the physical properties of the rubber are developed to impart elastomeric properties to the rubber generally, associated with the rubber in its conventionally vulcanized state.
  • the degree of cure of the vulcanized rubber can be described in terms of gel content or conversely extractable components. Alternatively, the degree of cure can be expressed in terms of cross-link density.
  • the improved thermoplastic elastomeric compositions are produced by vulcanizing the curable rubber component of the blends to the extent that it contains no more than about four percent by weight of the cured rubber component extractable at room temperature by a solvent which dissolves the rubber which is intended to be vulcanized, and preferably to the extent that the composition contains less than two percent by weight extractable.
  • Gel content reported as percent gel is determined by a procedure which comprises determining the amount of insoluble polymer by soaking the specimen for 48 hours in organic solvent at room temperature and weighing the dried residue and making suitable corrections based upon knowledge of the composition.
  • corrected initial and final weights are obtained by subtracting from the initial weight, the weight of soluble components, other than the rubber to be vulcanized, such as extender oils, plasticizers and components of the composition soluble in organic solvent as well as that rubber component of the DVA which is not intended to be cured. Any insoluble pigments, fillers, etc., are subtracted from both the initial and final weights .
  • the blends are vulcanized to the extent which corresponds to " vulcanizing the same rubber as in the blend statically cured under pressure in a mold with such amounts of the same curatives as in the blend and under such conditions of time and temperature to give an effective cross-link density greater than about 3x10" ⁇ moles per milliliter of rubber and preferably greater than about 5x10"5 or even more preferredly 1x10" ⁇ moles per milliliter of rubber.
  • the blend is then dynamically vulcanized under similar conditions with the same amount of curative based on the rubber content of the blend as was required for the rubber alone.
  • the cross-link density so determined may be regarded as a measure of the amount of vulcanization which gives the improved thermoplastics.
  • the amount of curative is based on the rubber content of the blend and is that amount which gives the rubber alone the aforesaid cross-link density, that the curative does not react with the resin or that there is no reaction between the resin and rubber.
  • the cross-link density determined as described provides a useful approxi ⁇ mation of the cross-link density of the thermoplastic elastomeric compositions is consistent with the thermo ⁇ plastic properties and that a large proportion of the resin can be removed from the composition by high temperature solvent extraction.
  • the cross-link density of the rubber is determined by equilibrium solvent swelling using .the Flory-Rehner equation. 3. Rubber Che . and Tech, 30, p. 929. The appropriate Huggins solubility parameters for rubber-solvent pairs used in the calculation were obtained from the review article by Sheehan and Bisio, 3. Rubber Chem. & Tech., 39, 149. If the extracted gel content of the vulcanized rubber is low, it is necessary to use the correction of Bueche wherein the term v ⁇ is multiplied by the gel fraction (S.gel/100) . The cross-link density is half the effective network chain density v_ determined in the absence of resin.
  • cross-link density of the vulcanized blends will, therefore, be hereinafter understood to refer to the value, determined on the same rubber as in the blend in the manner described. Still more preferred compositions meet both of the a f oredescribed measures of state of cure, namely, by estimation of cross-link density and percent of rubber extractable .
  • a preferred composition of this invention com ⁇ prises ethylene vinyl acetate as the ethylene copolymer resin, in combination with chlorinated butyl rubber and polychloroprene, and the rubbers are dynamically vulcanized utilizing a ZnO cure system (which can include a curing resin or an accelerator).
  • the compositions exhibit exceptional resilience and low tension set as well as unusually low hardness, properties quite unusual for dynamically vulcanized composi ⁇ tions. They are useful in various molded and extruded articles, including seals, gaskets, clamped hose, etc.
  • Step 1 Load elastomer(s) , EVA, stabilizers, mineral filler and process aids. Mix at high speed until fluxed (approximately 140-150°C chart temperature).
  • Step 2 Bring temperature to approximately 150°C (chart) and add approximately two-thirds of oil in small increments being certain to maintain batch tempera ⁇ ture above the melting point of the EVA.
  • Step 3 Add the curatives. Observe peak in mixing torque (typically 60-120 seconds later). Mix an additional 4-5 minutes past peak.
  • Step 5 Dump mix when oil has been absorbed. Sheet out batch on cool mill.
  • a series of DVA compounds were made using ethylene copolymer resins, chlorinated butyl rubber and Neoprene ® W (Table II) .
  • the compounds differed in polymer blend content, ethylene copolymer resin type, oil content, and cure system.
  • the compositions were dynamically cured with the indicated cure systems using the procedure set forth in Table I.
  • composition 8 utilizes an ethylene propylene copolymer which is outside of the scope of the defined ethylene copolymer and resulted in a composition which had very low hardness and was resilient, but which was severely deficient in strength as indicated by tensile strength and high compression set.
  • Composition 7 contained stearic acid in place of process oil which resulted in a harder blend with less ability to flow. The concentration of stearic acid exceeded the ability of the polymer blend to absorb it, exuded to the surface and as such does not represent a desirable blend.
  • compositions 2-5 were particularly attractive considering the combination of physical properties and processability ..
  • Chlorobutyl 1066 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 20.3 28.5 28.5 20.3
  • Neoprene W 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 20.3 28.5 28.5 20.3
  • CHLOROBUTYL 1066 Chlorinated isoprene - isobutylene copolymer, Exxon Chemical Americas 51-60 ML (1+8) 100°C
  • Exxon (EVA) XR-70.36 Ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer, 3 MI, 2 ⁇ % Exxon Chemical Americas vinyl acetate
  • Exxon (EVA) LD-721 Ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer, 2.5 MI, 18% Exxon Chemical Americas vinyl acetate
  • JSR EP-02P Ethylene propylene copolymer, 20 Mooney at Japan Synthetic Rubber 100°C, 73% ethylene Company

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Abstract

Soft, resilient thermoplastic compositions with good physical strength useful as molded parts including hoses, seals and gaskets which exhibit good flow and good surface characteristics in injection molded parts. The compositions comprise ethylene copolymer resin (e.g., ethylene vinyl acetate), halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene wherein the rubbers have been dynamically vulcanized to a fully cured state in the presence of the ethylene copolymer resin.

Description

DYNAMICALLY CURED THERMOPLASTIC OLEFIN POLYMERS (E-76)
This application is a continuation-in-part of United States Patent application serial number 679,827, filed December 10, 1984.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In recent years there has been significant commercial interest in polymer blends which have a combina¬ tion of both elastic and thermoplastic properties. These polymer blends have been given the generic designation of Thermoplastic Olefins ("TPO"). They exhibit some of the properties of a cured elastomer as well as the reprocessi- bility of thermoplastic resins. The elastomeric character¬ istics are enhanced if one component of the blend is a vulcanizable elastomer which is wholly or partially cross- linked.
The earliest work in the curing of TPO composi¬ tions area was by Gessler and Haslett; see U.S. Patent No. 3,037,954. That patent teaches the concept of "dynamic curing" wherein a vulcanizable elastomer is dispersed into a resinous thermoplastic polymer and the elastomer cured while continuously mixing and shearing the polymer blend. The- result is a micro-gel dispersion of cured rubber in an uncured matrix of resinous thermoplastic polymer. Gessler, • '954 discloses compositions comprising polypropylene and a rubber wherein the rubber can be, inter alia, butyl rubber, chlorinated butyl rubber, polybutadiene, polychloroprene and polyisobutene. Compositions of about 50 to 95 parts polypropylene and about 5 to 50 parts of rubber are disclosed.
U.S. Patent Nos. 3,758,643 and 3,806,558 disclose TPO type polymers comprising an olefin resin and olefin copolymer rubber wherein the rubber is dynamically cured to a partial cure state. These compositions are reprocessible and result in molded products having good surface appear¬ ance. However, the potential applications of these products is limited because of high compression set and/or low softening temperatures resulting from only a partial cure of the rubber. Furthermore, the partial peroxide cure utilized is difficult to control from the standpoint of completeness of reaction, resulting in batch to batch variations in product properties.
U.S. Patent 4,130,534 discloses TPO blends which comprise a polyolefin resin and a butyl rubber wherein the blend comprises up to 60 vtt% of polyolefin resin and 40 wt& or more of a rubber. The butyl rubbers which can be utilized include butyl rubber per se as well as chlorinated or brominated butyl rubber. In the preferred embodiment, the polyolefin resin comprises 20 to 45 wtϋό of the blend and the rubber comprises about 80 to 55 wtS. of the blend. The rubber is said to be fully cured, the cure being a dynamic vulcanization.
U.S. Patent No. 4,130,535 discloses TPO composi¬ tions wherein the rubber component is an ethylene propylene copolymer ("EPM") or terpolymer ("EPDM"). The preferred thermoplastic polyolefin resins are polypropylene and polyethylene. The compositions comprise about 75 to about 25 wtSό polyolefin resin and about 25 to about 75 wtJS rubber. The rubber is dynamically cured to a fully cured state. Similar compositions are disclosed in U.S. Patent 4,311,628 wherein the cure system for the rubber is a metal activated halo resin cure, e.g., brominated dimethylol phenol resins.
These TPO systems wherein the rubber is fully cured have the disadvantage that, as a result of poor flow characteristics, injection molded components made from these TPO's exhibit "flow line" imperfections. As a consequence special mold designs are required to minimize the problem, especially for large parts. Applications are further limited because of the high Shore A hardness of the composition.
U.S. Patent No. 4,409,365 discloses TPO composi¬ tions in which a polyolefin resin is combined with an EPDM and a nitrile rubber. The rubbers are vulcanized and the product is said to have improved oil resistance. U.S. Patent No. 3,081,279 discloses compositions wherein a rubber such as butyl rubber is combined with a sul fochlorinated polyolefin resin and cured. The uncured blend is said to have improved processing characteristics.
U.S. Patent No. 2,369,471 discloses blends of ethylene polymers with various hydrocarbon rubbers and halogenated rubbers. The compositions are either uncured or compression molded vulcanizates.
U.S. Patent 4,302,557 discloses a shrink film which comprises an EPM or EPDM rubber and a low density polyethylene or soft ethylene copolymer such as ethylene vinylacetate. Alternatively, the polymer blends can include polypropylene or high density polyethylene (HDPE). Another variant of the disclosed composition comprises the ethylene copolymer rubber with the polypropylene or HDPE. The rubber can be unvulcanized or, in the alternative a film of the blend is prepared and radiation cross-linked to form a heat shrinkable film.
U.S. Patent 4,212,787 discloses a combination of a peroxide curable rubber and a peroxide decomposible poly¬ olefin resin which may, alternatively have incorporated therein a non-peroxide curable rubber such as polyisobuty- . lene. The peroxide curable rubber is preferably an ethylene propylene rubber (EPR) and the peroxide decomposible polymer is preferably polypropylene. The curable rubber is par¬ tially cured in the manner of U.S. Patent 3,866,558, supra. The partial curing can be carried out in the presence of divinyl benzene. The product is said to have improved flexibility and rebound elasticity. The compositions comprise about 100 to 5 parts by weight of a partially cured elastomer which is prepared by the dynamic heat treatment in the presence of a peroxide of a mixture of 100 to 40 parts by weight of (a) peroxide-curable olefin copolymer rubber and 0 to 60 parts by weight of (b) a peroxide-decomposible olefin plastic; and 5 to 100 parts of at least one (c) peroxide non-curable hydrocarbon rubber. U.S. Patent No. 4,202,801 discloses dynamically partially cured blends of EPM or EPDM with a resin (poly¬ ethylene or polypropylene) and a conjugated diene rubber, e.g., polychloroprene. The composition is a typical TPO. While polychloroprene is disclosed as one of the conjugated diene rubbers, it is one of many rubbers disclosed, and no preference is taught nor do any examples illustrate the use of polychloroprene or any benefit derived therefrom.
U.S. Patent No. 4,348,266 discloses, inter alia, an elastoplastic composition which can comprise 20-45 parts of polyethylene and 80 to 55 parts of polychloroprene. The preferred embodiment is cured by irradiation. A comparison is made' with a control which is chemically cured by dynam¬ ically vulcanizing a PE/polychloroprene blend wherein the curative system is ZπO, benzo hiazyldisulfide and -phenylene bismaleimide.
Other TPO compositions have been prepared, utiliz¬ ing a thermoplastic 'polyolefin resin in conjunction with a rubber. U.S. Patent 4,104,210 discloses compositions wherein the rubber is a diolefin rubber, e.g., natural rubber, polyisoprene, nit'rile rubber or styrene butadiene rubber. The rubber is fully cured. U.S. Patent No. 4,211,- 049 discloses particular curatives for the TPO compositions containing diolefin rubbers, e.g., phenolic curatives, urethane curatives and certain sulfur donor curatives. U.S. Patent 4,141,878 discloses TPO compositions wherein the rubber is cross-linked chlorosulfonated polyethylene.
The TPO compositions of the prior art are either compositions in which the rubber component is uncured or partially cured and have low tensile strength and high compression set or are compositions containing a fully cured rubber portion and consequently are high in hardness and have poor flow characteristics when injection molded, resulting in flow lines in the finished product.
Various other compositions of resins with rubbers are taught in the art. The resins are generally polyethy¬ lene or polypropylene. U.S. Patent No. 3,407,253 discloses a blend of a crystalline polyolefin, e.g., polypropylene with a rubber, e.g., butyl rubber which is alleged to have voids when the polyolefin is stretched. The elastomer is unvulcanized . The product is non-transparent and has a leather like feel.
U.S. Patent No. 3,597,372 discloses a blend of a thermoplastic and a rubber, e.g., polypropylene with neoprene. The rubber is cross-linked by chemical means or with irradiation. The composition, when formed into articles and cured, exhibits shrink properties.
U.S. Patent 3,701 ,702 discloses compositions of about 2 to about 30 wtSS of a fiber forming thermoplastic resin, e.g., polypropylene and an elastomer, e.g., poly¬ chloroprene. The resin and elastomer are thoroughly blended above the melting point of the resin, cooled below the melting point of the resin and curatives added. The" composi¬ tion is then shaped and free cured without pressure restraint.
U.S. Patent No. 3,965,055 discloses blends of vulcanizable rubbers with a resin, e.g., polypropylene. The vulcanizable rubbers can include polychloroprene and butyl rubber blends. The resin is dispersed throughout the continuous rubber phase and has a particle size of cross section of about 0.5 microns or less and an L/D ratio of at least 2. The compositions can be blended with curatives, formed and vulcanized by free curing without pressure restraint .
U.S. Patent No. 4,005,054 discloses a vulcanizable composition comprising a resin and a rubber wherein the resin can be polypropylene and the rubber can be polychloro¬ prene. The composition is processed so that the resin is formed into fibrils of less than 5 microns in diameter. The product is said to resist elongation in one direction. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It has surprisingly been found that a TPO having low hardness, and excellent resilience as well as good physical strength characteristics coupled with excellent processibility, excellent flow characteristics, good oil resistance and low compression set can be prepared from a blend of a specific type of thermoplastic olefin resin and two rubber components. The unexpected result is achieved by selecting as the thermoplastic olefin an ethylene copolymer resin, e.g., ethylene vinyl acetate, ethylene methyl acrylate, etc., and as rubbers halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene. The rubbers are blended with the resin and dynamically cured, preferably using a ZnO containing cure system.
The compositions exhibit exceptional resilience and low tension set as well as unusually low hardness, properties quite unusual for dynamically vulcanized composi¬ tions. They are useful in various molded and extruded articles, including seals, gaskets, clamped hose, etc.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
This invention relates to improved TPO composi¬ tions. In particular it relates to compositions of a specific type of polyolefin resin and two rubbers, one of which is a halogenated butyl rubber and the other rubber is a polychloroprene. The vulcanization or curing (i.e., crossliπking) of the rubber is accomplished by dynamic vulcanization .
As used in the specification and claims, the term "dynamic vulcanization" means a vulcanization process for effecting crosslinking of a rubber-containing TPO composi¬ tion wherein the rubber is vulcanized under conditions of high shear. As a . result, the rubber is simul aneously crosslinked and dispersed as fine particles of a "micro-gel" within a polyolefin matrix. Dynamic vulcanization is effected by mixing the TPO ingredients at a temperature which is at or above the curing temperature of the rubber in equipment such as roll mills, Banbury mixers, continuous mixers, kneaders or mixing extruders, e.g., twin screw extruders. The unique characteristic of the dynamically cured compositions is that, notwithstanding the fact that the rubber component is fully cured, the compositions can be. processed and reprocessed by conventional rubber and/or thermoplastic processing techniques such as extrusion, injection molding, compression molding, etc. Scrap or flashing can be salvaged and reprocessed.
The term "dynamically vulcanized alloy" (DVA) as used in the specification and claims means a composition comprising a thermoplastic resin and a rubber wherein the rubber component has been dynamically vulcanized to a fully cured state. The compositions are generally prepared by blending together the polyolefin resin and rubbers with curatives and fillers under conditions of dynamic vulcaniza¬ tion. In preparing the preferred DVA compositions of this invention at least one ethylene copolymer polyolefin resin is blended with a halogenated butyl rubber and a polychloroprene rubber.
The term "ethylene copolymer resin" as used in the specification and claims means copolymers of ethylene with an alkyl ester of an alpha, beta monoethylenically unsatu- rated monocarboxylic acid as well as copolymers with the acid per se . In particular, copolymers of ethylene with vinylacetate or alkyl acrylates, for example methyl acry- late, (EMA), butyl acrylate (EBA), and ethyl acrylate (EEA) can be employed. These ethylene copolymers typically comprise about 70 to about 98 wt5o ethylene, preferably about 70 to 95 wt& ethylene, more preferably about 71 to about 91 wtSo ethylene, e.g., about 72 to about 85 wtSό ethylene the balance of copolymer being the alkyl ester. The expression "EVA" means, specifically ethylene-viπylacetate copolymers. The ethylene-copolymer resins- suitable for use in the practice of this invention have a melt index of about 0.2 to about 500 (ASTM D 1238 Condition E) .
Other polyolefin resins such as high density polyethylene, polypropylene and reactor copolymers of polypropylene can optionally be blended in limited amounts with the ethylene copolymer resin to the extent that such other polyolefin resins do not detract from the desirable high resilience and low hardness of the preferred composi¬ tions. The use of such other polyolefin resins can increase the high temperature resistance of the resulting blends. Similarly, limited amounts of other polyolefin homopolymers and copolymers can be optionally utilized in combination with ethylene copolymer resin in the practice of this invention if desired, e.g., low density polyethylene, linear low density polyethylene and polybutylene.
The rubbers which can be used in the practice of this invention are halogenated butyl rubber and polychloro¬ prene. Halogenated buty rubber is typically prepared from butyl rubber. Butyl rubber is a copolymer of an isoolefin and a conjugated ultiolefin. The useful copolymers comprise a major portion of isoolefin and a minor amount, preferably not more than 30 wt35, of a conjugated multiolefin. The preferred copolymers comprise about 85-99.5 wt3 (preferably 95-99.5 wt%) of a C -C7 isoolefin, such as isobutylene, and about 15-0.5 wtSS (preferably about 5-0.5 wtS) of a multi¬ olefin of about 4-14 carbon atoms. These copolymers are referred to in the patents and literature as "butyl rubber"; see, for example, the textbook Synthetic Rubber by G. S. Whitby (1954 edition by 3ohn Wiley and Sons, Inc.), pages 608-609, etc. The term "butyl rubber" as used in the specification and claims includes the aforementioned copolymers of an isoolefin having 4-7 carbon atoms and about 0.5 to 20 vtt% of a conjugated multiolefin of about 4-10 carbon atoms. Preferably these copolymers contain about 0.5 to about 5% conjugated multiolefin. The preferred isoolefin is isobutylene. Suitable conjugated multiolefin's include isoprene, butadiene, dimethyl butadiene, piperylene, etc.
Commercial butyl rubber is a copolymer of iso¬ butylene and minor amounts of isoprene. It is generally prepared in a slurry process using methyl chloride as a vehicle and a Friedel-Crafts catalyst as the polymerization initiator. The methyl chloride offers the advantage that AICI3, a relatively inexpensive Friedel-Crafts catalyst is soluble in it, as are the isobutylene and isoprene comono- mers. Additionally, the butyl rubber polymer is insoluble in the methyl chloride and precipitates out of solution as fine particles. The polymerization is generally carried out at temperatures of about -90°C to -100°C. See U.S. Patent Nos. 2,356,128 and 2,356,129 incorporated herein by reference.
The polymerization process, which is typically carried out in a draft tube reactor, is continuous. Monomer feed and catalyst are continuously introduced at the bottom of the draft tube where an axial flow pump is located. The pump circulates the slurry at high velocity to provide efficient mixing and heat transfer. Polymer slurry contain¬ ing about 20-30 tSS butyl rubber continuously overflows from the reactor through a transfer line.
Where the desired product is the butyl rubber itself, the slurry is fed through the transfer line to a flash drum operated at about 140-180Pa (1.38-1.58 atm) and 65-75°C. Steam and hot water are mixed with the slurry in a nozzle as it enters the drum to vaporize methyl chloride and unreacted monomers which pass overhead are recovered, and the polymer is finished by water removal and drying. Where, however,it is desired to produce a halogenated butyl rubber, this can be accomplished by preparing a solution of the rubber. Of course, any halogenation technique may be utilized.
In one preferred method of halogenation a "solvent replacement", process is utilized. Cold butyl rubber slurry in methyl chloride from the polymerization reactor is passed to an agitated solution in a drum containing liquid hexane. Hot hexane vapors are introduced to flash overhead, the methyl chloride diluent and unreacted monomers. Dissolution of the fine slurry particles occurs rapidly. The resulting solution is stripped to remove traces of methyl chloride and monomers, and brought to the desired concentration for halogenation by flash concentration. Hexane recovered from the flash concentration step is condensed and returned to the solution drum.
In the halogenation process butyl rubber in solution is contacted with chlorine or bromine in a series of high-intensity mixing stages. Hydrochloric or hydro- bromic acid is generated during the halogenation step and must be neutralized. For a detailed description of the halogenation process see U.S. Patent Nos. 3,029,191 and 2,940,960, as well as U.S. Patent No. 3,099,644 which describes a continuous chlorination process, all of which patents are incorporated herein by reference. The ethylene copolymer resin component of the DVA composition of this invention comprises about 25 to about 100 wtSo of ethylene copolymer resin; preferably about 35 to about 100 wt%; more preferably about 45 to about 100 wt&, e.g., 45 to about 90 wt5S. Blends of EVA with EMA and or EEA may also be used. The optional af oredescribed polyolefin resins and other polyolefin homopolymers and copolymers which can be blended with the ethylene copolymer resin comprise about 0 to 75 wtSS of the ethylene copolymer resin component of the DVA. When the optional resin is used, it is preferably incorporated into the blend at about 10 to about 55 wtS5; more preferably about 15 to about 35 t£ of the ethylene copolymer resin component is the optional resin. In the preferred embodiment of this invention, ethylene vinyl acetate is used alone as the ethylene copoly¬ mer resin.
In the practice of this invention, the ethylene copolymer resin, the halogenated butyl rubber and the polychloroprene are preferably utilized in • substantially equal proportions. The term "substantially equal propor¬ tions" as used in the specification and claims with respect to the ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers means that each- of the rubbers are incorporated in the DVA at about 90 to 110 wtSό based on the ethylene copolymer resin (e.g. , EVA) fraction of the polymer blend. For example, where the EVA is present in the DVA at about 20 wtS. based on the overall DVA composition, the halogenated butyl rubber and the polychloroprene can each be present at about 18 to about 22 vtt%. The term "polymer blend" as used in the specification and claims means the blend of ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers.
The polychloroprene rubber is the primary contrib¬ utor to oil resistance and enhances resilience of the DVA composition of this invention. It should comprise at least 35 wt% of the halogenated butyl rubber plus polychloroprene rubber. On the other hand, polychloroprene is not ordinari¬ ly compatible with ethylene copolymer resins while haloge- nated butyl rubber is. The halogenated butyl rubber serves to "compatibilize" the polychloroprene with the ethylene copolymer resin and should be present at a level of at least 25 wtS based on the total rubber. Hence, the halogenated butyl rubber can comprise about 25 to about 65 wtft of the total rubber in the DVA composition. Preferably, each of the rubbers comprise about 35 to about 65 wt& of the total rubber. It will be evident from this disclosure that a novel aspect of this invention is that a rubber which is not normally compatible with a resin polymer can be made so by blending it with a minor amount of a second rubber which is compatible with the resin.
The polymer blend comprises about 40 to about 80 wtSό of the overall DVA composition. Each component of the polymer blend can comprise about 12 to about 35 wt& of the DVA. Preferably each of the rubbers and the ethylene copolymer resin comprise about 13 to about 32 wtSό of the DVA composition, more preferably- about 15 to about 30 wtSό of the DVA, most preferably about 16 to about 28 wtSό, e.g., about 18 to about 22 wt£.
In addition to the polymer component, the DVA composition of this invention can include fillers, antioxi- dants, stabilizers, rubber processing oils, lubricants (e.g., olea ide), antiblocking agents, waxes, foaming agents, pigments, coupling agents for the fillers and other processing aids known to the rubber and plastics compounding art. Metal oxides, e.g., MgO, can be included to act as acid acceptors. The pigments and fillers can comprise up to 30 wtSJ of the total DVA composition based on polymer component plus additives. Preferably the filler comprises about 5 to about 30 wtSό based on the DVA composition, more prefera¬ bly about 7 to about 28 wtJά, e.g., about 8 to about 25 wtS. of the overall composition. Fillers can be inorganic fillers such as calcium carbonate, clays, silica or carbon black. Any type of carbon black can be used, such as channel blacks, furnace blacks, thermal blacks, acetylene black, lamp black and the like.
Rubber process oils have particular ASTM designa¬ tions depending on whether they fall into the class of paraffinic, naphthenic or aromatic process oils. The type of process oil utilized will be that customarily used in conjunction with the rubber component. The skilled rubber chemist will recognize which type of oil should be utilized with a particular rubber. The quantity of rubber process oil utilized is based on the total rubber content, and can be defined as the ratio, by weight, of process oil to the rubber in the DVA which is to be dynamically vulcanized. This ratio can vary from 0.1/1 to about 1.3/1; preferably about 0.2/1 to about 1/1; more preferably about 0.3/1 to about 0.75/1. Oils other' than petroleum based oils such as oils derived from coal tar and pine tar can also be utilized.
In addition to the petroleum derived rubber process oils, organic esters and other synthetic plasti- cizers can be used. As used in the specification and claims, the term "process oil" means both the petroleum derived process oils and synthetic plasticizers.
The process oil is a desirable ingredient of the DVA where it is necessary to insure that the DVA has good flow properties, e.g., spiral test flow reading greater than about 8 cm., preferably greater than about 15 cm., particu¬ larly where the composition is to be used for injection molding. The quantity of oil utilized will depend in part on the amount of polymer blend, the type of ethylene copolymer resin and filler used as well as, to some extent, the type of cure system utilized. Generally, the process oil will comprise about 10 to about 35 wt!5, e.g., about 13 to about 30 wtSS of the DVA. Larger amounts of process oil can be used, the deficit being reduced physical strength of the DVA.
Where the ethylene copolymer resin comprises a blend of one or more optional resins in addition to, e.g., the EVA, the process oil content of the DVA can be increased or reduced proportionately depending on the contribution of the flow characteristics of the optional resin as well as the strength and other properties desired.
Antioxidants can be utilized in the composition of this invention - the particular antioxidant utilized will depend on the rubbers and plastics utilized and more than one type may be required. Their proper selection is well within the skill of the practitioner in this field. Antioxi¬ dants will generally fall into the class of chemical or physical protect ant's . Physical protectants are used where there is to be little movement in the part to be manufactur¬ ed from the composition. These are generally waxy materials which impart a "bloom" to the surface of the rubber part and form a protective coating or shield the part from oxygen, ozone, etc. The physical protectants include mixed petroleum waxes and microcrystalline waxes.
The chemical protectants generally fall into three chemical groups: secondary amines, phenolics and phos¬ phites. Illustrative, non-limiting examples of types of antioxidants useful in the practice of this invention are hindered phenols, amino phenols, hydroquinones , alkyl- diamines, amine condensation products, etc. Non-limiting examples of these and other types of antioxidants are styrenated phenol; 2, 2' -methylene-bis-(4-methyl-6-1 , butyl- phenol); 2,6' -di-t-butyl-o-dimethyl-amino-p-cresol; hydro- quinone mαnobenzyl ether, octylated diphenyl amine, phenyl- beta-naphthlyamine; N,N' -di-phenyle thylene diamine; aldol- alpha-naphthylamine ; N , N ' -di-phenyl-p-phenyleπe diamine, etc. Any conventional cure system for the rubber to be dynamically vulcanized can be used except that peroxide cures should be used with caution since they can crosslink the ethylene copolymer resin and thereby reduce thermoplas- ticity and they can depolymerize polypropylene where the latter is included as an optional ingredient. Otherwise, any of the curatives or cure systems known in the art for the vulcanization or curing (i.e., crosslinking) of conju¬ gated diene rubbers are suitable. These include sulfur cures as well as non-sulfur cures. For example, halogenated butyl rubber can be cured using zinc oxide alone. Of course, accelerators such as dithiocarbamates, thiura s, diamines and thioureas can be included in these zinc oxide cures. Zinc oxide free cures of halogenated butyl rubber known to the art can be utilized. For example, one such vulcaniz¬ ing system comprises litharge, 2-mercaptoimidazoline and diphenyl guanidine.
Resin cures can be used for halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene rubber. The resins useful as curatives are phenolic resins, brominated phenolic resins, urethane resins, etc.
While phenolic resin cures are suitable cures,, they impart a yellowish or orangish tinge to the rubber part. A preferred cure is one based on ZnO and/or MgO. Such cures permit the use of pigments such as Tiθ2 to give bright white compositions. In the cure system, the MgO acts primarily not as an accelerator, but as an acid acceptor to stabilize the rubber from dehalogeπation.
In a preferred embodiment, the halogenated rubber to be vulcanized is chlorinated or brominated butyl rubber. Halogenated butyl rubbers are vulcanized with zinc oxide cures. Sulfur-bearing accelerators can be utilized with the zinc oxide.
Illustrative of accelerators which can be used in conjunction with ZnO for curing halogenated butyl rubber are brominated alkyl phenol resin; N, N -diethylthiourea; di-ortho-(tolyl)guanidine salt of dicatechol borate; dipentamethylene thiuram tetrasulfide ethylene trithiocarba- mate; 2-mercapt o-benzothiazole ; benzo thiazole disulfide; tetra methyl thiuram disulfide, zinc diethyldithiocarbamate , zinc dibutyldithiocarbamate, and zinc dimethyldithiocarbam- ate. Formulations for the ZnO cure of halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene are well known in the art. A preferred cure system comprises MgO, ZnO and zinc diethyl¬ dithiocarbamate since this system results in a vulcanized rubber with low compression set.
In the practice of this invention the ethylene copolymer resin and rubbers are mixed together at a tempera¬ ture sufficient to soften the resin or, more commonly, at a temperature above its melting point where the resin is crystalline at room temperature. After the resin and rubbers are intimately mixed, the curative is added. Heating and masticating at vulcanization or curing tempera¬ tures are generally adequate to complete vulcanization in about 0.5 to abou't 10 minutes. The vulcanization time can be reduced by elevating the temperature of vulcanization. A suitable range of vulcanization temperatures is from about the melting point of the ethylene copolymer resin (about 90°C depending on the co-monomer content) to about 225°C; more typically, the temperature range is about 120°C to about 200°C. Preferably the vulcanization is carried out at a temperature of about 150°C to about 190°C.
It is preferred that the mixing process be continued until vulcanization is complete. If vulcanization is permitted to continue after mixing has stopped, the composition will not be reprocessible as a thermoplastic. However, the dynamic vulcanization can be carried out in stages. For example, vulcanization can be commenced in a twin screw extruder and pellets formed of the DVA material using an underwater pelletizer thereby quenching the vulcanization before it is complete. It can be completed at a later time under dynamic vulcanization conditions. Those skilled in the art will appreciate the appropriate quanti¬ ties, types of curatives and extent of mixing time - required to carry out the vulcanization of the rubber. Where necessary, the rubber alone can be vulcanized using varying • amounts of curative to determine the optimum cure system to be utilized and the appropriate cure conditions to achieve a full cure.
While it is preferred that all components are present in the mix prior to carrying out the dynamic vulcanization process of this invention, this is not a necessary condition. For example, in one embodiment the rubber to be cured can be dynamically vulcanized in the presence of some or all of the ethylene copolymer resin. This blend can then be let down into additional ethylene copolymer and/or optional resin. Similarly, it is not necessary to add all of the fillers and oil prior to dynamic vulcanization. Some or all of the fillers and oil can be added after dynamic vulcanization is complete.
The term "fully vulcanized" as used in the specifications and claims with respect to the dynamically vulcanized rubber component of this invention means that the rubber component to be vulcanized has been cured to a state in which the physical properties of the rubber are developed to impart elastomeric properties to the rubber generally, associated with the rubber in its conventionally vulcanized state. The degree of cure of the vulcanized rubber can be described in terms of gel content or conversely extractable components. Alternatively, the degree of cure can be expressed in terms of cross-link density.
Where the determination of extractables is an appropriate measure of the state of cure, the improved thermoplastic elastomeric compositions are produced by vulcanizing the curable rubber component of the blends to the extent that it contains no more than about four percent by weight of the cured rubber component extractable at room temperature by a solvent which dissolves the rubber which is intended to be vulcanized, and preferably to the extent that the composition contains less than two percent by weight extractable. In general, the less extractables of the cured rubber component the better are the properties and still more preferable are compositions comprising essentially no extractable rubber from the cured" rubber phase (less than 0.5 weight percent). Gel content reported as percent gel is determined by a procedure which comprises determining the amount of insoluble polymer by soaking the specimen for 48 hours in organic solvent at room temperature and weighing the dried residue and making suitable corrections based upon knowledge of the composition. Thus, corrected initial and final weights are obtained by subtracting from the initial weight, the weight of soluble components, other than the rubber to be vulcanized, such as extender oils, plasticizers and components of the composition soluble in organic solvent as well as that rubber component of the DVA which is not intended to be cured. Any insoluble pigments, fillers, etc., are subtracted from both the initial and final weights .
To employ cross-link density as the measure of the state of cure which characterizes the improved thermoplastic elastomeric compositions, the blends are vulcanized to the extent which corresponds to" vulcanizing the same rubber as in the blend statically cured under pressure in a mold with such amounts of the same curatives as in the blend and under such conditions of time and temperature to give an effective cross-link density greater than about 3x10"^ moles per milliliter of rubber and preferably greater than about 5x10"5 or even more preferredly 1x10"^ moles per milliliter of rubber. The blend is then dynamically vulcanized under similar conditions with the same amount of curative based on the rubber content of the blend as was required for the rubber alone. The cross-link density so determined may be regarded as a measure of the amount of vulcanization which gives the improved thermoplastics. However, it should not be assumed, from the fact that the amount of curative is based on the rubber content of the blend and is that amount which gives the rubber alone the aforesaid cross-link density, that the curative does not react with the resin or that there is no reaction between the resin and rubber. There may be highly significant reactions involved but of limited extent. However, the assumption that the cross-link density determined as described provides a useful approxi¬ mation of the cross-link density of the thermoplastic elastomeric compositions is consistent with the thermo¬ plastic properties and that a large proportion of the resin can be removed from the composition by high temperature solvent extraction.
The cross-link density of the rubber is determined by equilibrium solvent swelling using .the Flory-Rehner equation. 3. Rubber Che . and Tech, 30, p. 929. The appropriate Huggins solubility parameters for rubber-solvent pairs used in the calculation were obtained from the review article by Sheehan and Bisio, 3. Rubber Chem. & Tech., 39, 149. If the extracted gel content of the vulcanized rubber is low, it is necessary to use the correction of Bueche wherein the term v^ is multiplied by the gel fraction (S.gel/100) . The cross-link density is half the effective network chain density v_ determined in the absence of resin. The cross-link density of the vulcanized blends will, therefore, be hereinafter understood to refer to the value, determined on the same rubber as in the blend in the manner described. Still more preferred compositions meet both of the a f oredescribed measures of state of cure, namely, by estimation of cross-link density and percent of rubber extractable .
A preferred composition of this invention com¬ prises ethylene vinyl acetate as the ethylene copolymer resin, in combination with chlorinated butyl rubber and polychloroprene, and the rubbers are dynamically vulcanized utilizing a ZnO cure system (which can include a curing resin or an accelerator). The compositions exhibit exceptional resilience and low tension set as well as unusually low hardness, properties quite unusual for dynamically vulcanized composi¬ tions. They are useful in various molded and extruded articles, including seals, gaskets, clamped hose, etc.
The advantage of this invention may be more readily appreciated by reference to the following examples. Typical mixing conditions used to prepare the DVA composi¬ tions are shown in Table I.
* Table I
Typical Mixing Procedure - Internal Mixer (e.g., "B" Banbury)
Step 1 Load elastomer(s) , EVA, stabilizers, mineral filler and process aids. Mix at high speed until fluxed (approximately 140-150°C chart temperature).
Step 2 Bring temperature to approximately 150°C (chart) and add approximately two-thirds of oil in small increments being certain to maintain batch tempera¬ ture above the melting point of the EVA.
Step 3 Add the curatives. Observe peak in mixing torque (typically 60-120 seconds later). Mix an additional 4-5 minutes past peak.
Step 4 Add remaining oil.
Step 5 Dump mix when oil has been absorbed. Sheet out batch on cool mill.
Examples 1-8
A series of DVA compounds were made using ethylene copolymer resins, chlorinated butyl rubber and Neoprene® W (Table II) . The compounds differed in polymer blend content, ethylene copolymer resin type, oil content, and cure system. The compositions were dynamically cured with the indicated cure systems using the procedure set forth in Table I.
For comparative purposes, composition 8 utilizes an ethylene propylene copolymer which is outside of the scope of the defined ethylene copolymer and resulted in a composition which had very low hardness and was resilient, but which was severely deficient in strength as indicated by tensile strength and high compression set. Composition 7 contained stearic acid in place of process oil which resulted in a harder blend with less ability to flow. The concentration of stearic acid exceeded the ability of the polymer blend to absorb it, exuded to the surface and as such does not represent a desirable blend.
The data show that blends within the scope of the invention resulted in very resilient, soft compositions which also exhibited excellent compression set resistance. Compositions 2-5 were particularly attractive considering the combination of physical properties and processability ..
Table II
Ingredient'8) Examp] .e
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Chlorobutyl 1066 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 20.3 28.5 28.5 20.3
EVA Exxon XR-70.36 18.5 — — — — — — —
EVA Exxon LD-721 — 18.5 — 18.5 20.3 19.4 19.4 —
EMA Gulf 2255 — — 18.5 — — — — —
JSR EP-02P — — — — — — — 20.3
Neoprene W 18.5 18.5 18.5 18.5 20.3 28.5 28.5 20.3
Maglite D 1.8 1.8 1.8 0.45 3.6 2.7 2.7 3.6
Ato ite 8.4 8.4 8.4 8.4 12.5 — — 12.5
Circosol 4240 Oil 29 29 29 — — — — —
Flexon 766 Oil — — — 29 15.5 12.9 — 15.5 r
Irganox 1010 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09
DLTDP 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.18
Stearic Acid 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.45 13.6 0.45
Zinc Oxide 3.6 3.6 3.6 3.6 4.5 5.9 5.9 4.5
Permalux 0.9 0.9 0.9 — — 1.4 1.4 —
SP-1055 Resin — — — 2.3 2.3 — — 2.3
Color Light Brown - Yellow- Gold - Brown Brown Yellow
Description Cfl >ft: , Very Rubbery,
Table II .
(continued)
Example
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Processability;
Bands on Rubber Mill Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Spiral Flow Test - cm 4(b) 27 23 34 15 8 9 8 at 800 psi
Physical Properties, Injection Molded
Hardness, Shore A, 45 50 49 46 60 62 77 30 Instantaneous
Tensile Strength, psi 595 520 420 420 695 755 740 145
Elongation, % 180 170 130 220 140 100 120 210
Set at Break, % 0 10 0 20 10 0 20 10
Compression Set B, % 22 Hrs. at RT 17 13 13 19 19 14 37 36 22 Mrs. at 50°c(D 54 40 38 34 40 23 —— —-
(a) See Ingredient List, Table III
(b) High shrinkage in direction of flow; true value higher than indicated (1) Plied specimens after annealing 1 hr @ 70αC to remove molding stress
Table III
Ingredient List
CHLOROBUTYL 1066 Chlorinated isoprene - isobutylene copolymer, Exxon Chemical Americas 51-60 ML (1+8) 100°C
Exxon (EVA) XR-70.36 Ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer, 3 MI, 2β% Exxon Chemical Americas vinyl acetate
Exxon (EVA) LD-721 Ethylene vinyl acetate copolymer, 2.5 MI, 18% Exxon Chemical Americas vinyl acetate
Gulf (EMA) 2255 Ethylene methyl acrylate copolymer, 2.4 MI, Gulf Oil Chemicals, U.S. 20% methyl acrylate Plastics Division I l
JSR EP-02P Ethylene propylene copolymer, 20 Mooney at Japan Synthetic Rubber 100°C, 73% ethylene Company
Flexon 766 Naphthenic process oil ASTM Type 104A Exxon Company USA Atomite Natural ground calcium carbonate, mean Thompson, Weinman and particle size 3 microns Company
Maglite D Magnesium oxide C. P. Hall, Merck Chemical Company
DLTDP Dilauryl thiodipropionate W. R. Grace and Company
Figure imgf000027_0001
Table III (continued) Ingredient List
Neoprene W Polychloroprene Rubber 42-52 ML (1+4) DuPont Elastomers Division 100°C
Circosol 4240 Oil Naphthenic Process Oil ASTM Type 103 Sun Petroleum Marketing Company
SP 1055 Brominated alkyl phenol resin Schenectady Chemical Permalux Di-ortho quanidine salt of dicathechol DuPont Elastomers Chemical borate Department
Figure imgf000028_0001
Figure imgf000028_0002
Figure imgf000028_0003

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A soft, resilient thermoplastic composition comprising a polymer blend wherein the polymer blend comprises ethylene copolymer resin, a halogenated butyl rubber and a polychloroprene rubber, said rubbers being crosslinked by dynamic vulcanization in the^ presence of the ethylene copolymer resin.
2. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said ethylene copolymer resin is selected from the group consisting of copolymers of ethylene with an alpha, beta monoethylenically unsaturated monocarboxylic acid, copoly¬ mers of ethylene with an alkyl ester of said acid and mixtures thereof.
3. The composition according to Claim 2 wherein said ethylene copolymer is selected from the group consist¬ ing of ethylene vinyl acetate, ethylene methyl acrylate, ethylene butyl acrylate and ethylene ethyl acrylate.
4. The composition according to CTaim 1 having a process oil incorporated in the composition.
5. The composition according to Claim 4 wherein the oil is incorporated into the composition at a weight, ratio of oil to rubber of about 0.1/1 to about 1.3/1.
6. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein a process oil is incorporated into the composition at about 10 wt% to about 35 wt& based on the overall composition.
7. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said ethylene copolymer resin, halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene are each incorporated into the composition in substantially equal proportions.
8. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said ethylene copolymer resin comprises a blend of ethylene copolymer resin with a limited amount of at least one optional polyolefin resin.
9. The composition according to Claim 8 wherein the optional polyolefin is selected. from the group consist¬ ing of high density polyethylene, polypropylene, reactor copolymers of polypropylene, linear low density polyethy¬ lene, low density polyethylene, and polybutylene.
10. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein a filler is incorporated into the composition.
11. The composition according to Claim 10 wherein the filler is incorporated into the composition at about 5 t. 30 wt?ό based on the total composition.
12. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein the polymer blend comprises about 40 to about 80 vt t% of the overall composition and the remainder of the composition comprises process oil, fillers and curatives.
13. The composition according to Claim 12 wherein the ethylene copolymer resin comprises about 12 to about 35 wt5ό of the overall composition.
14. The composition acording to Claim 12 wherein said ethylene copolymer resin, halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene are each incorporated into the composition at substantially equal proportions.
15. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber is chlorinated butyl rubber, brominated butyl rubber or blends thereof.
16. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber comprises at least 25 'wtSo based on halogenated butyl rubber plus polychloroprene.
17. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said polychloroprene comprises at least 35 wt% based on halogenated butyl rubber and polychloroprene.
18. The composition according to Claim 1 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber comprises about 25 to about 65 wtSό based on halogenated butyl rubber plus polychloroprene.
19. A method for preparing compatible blends of ethylene copolymer resin and a first rubber wherein said first rubber is incompatible with said ethylene copolymer resin which comprises blending with said ethylene copolymer resin and first rubber a second rubber wherein said second rubber is compatible with said resin.
20. The method according to Claim 19 wherein said second rubber comprises at least 25 wt% of the total of said first rubber plus second rubber.
21. The method according to Claim 19 wherein said ethylene copolymer resin is ethylene vinyl acetate, ethylene methyl acrylate, ethylene butyl acrylate, ethylene ethyl acrylate or blends thereof.
22. The method according to claim 19 wherein said first rubber is polychloroprene.
23. The method according to Claim 19 wherein said second rubber is halogenated butyl rubber.
24. The method according to Claim 23 wherein said halogenated butyl rubber is chlorinated butyl rubber.
PCT/US1986/001214 1986-06-03 1986-06-03 Dynamically cured thermoplastic olefin polymers (e-76) WO1987007625A1 (en)

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DE19863687906 DE3687906T2 (en) 1986-06-03 1986-06-03 DYNAMIC CROSSLINKED THERMOPLASTIC OLEFIN POLYMERS E-76.
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WO1992001746A1 (en) * 1990-07-26 1992-02-06 Advanced Elastomer Systems, L. P. Dynamically cured thermoplastic olefin polymers and process for producing the same
EP0483737A1 (en) * 1990-11-02 1992-05-06 E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Cured blends of polychloroprene and ethylene copolymers
WO1994021727A2 (en) * 1993-03-19 1994-09-29 Exxon Chemical Patents Inc. Compatibilized elastomer blends containing copolymers of isoolefins
GB2323597A (en) * 1997-03-26 1998-09-30 Bespak Plc Sealing material for use in a valve for an aerosol inhaler
WO2007136751A2 (en) * 2006-05-19 2007-11-29 Eastman Chemical Company Elastomeric compositions comprising butyl rubber and propylene polymers
EP2008943A1 (en) * 2007-06-26 2008-12-31 Giorgio Tosini Flexible cover sealed against atmospheric agents and related process for using it

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EP2008943A1 (en) * 2007-06-26 2008-12-31 Giorgio Tosini Flexible cover sealed against atmospheric agents and related process for using it

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DE3687906D1 (en) 1993-04-08
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JPH01502594A (en) 1989-09-07
EP0310599A4 (en) 1990-01-29
AU607394B2 (en) 1991-03-07
AU5991086A (en) 1988-01-11
EP0310599A1 (en) 1989-04-12

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