Sie sind auf Seite 1von 17

Designation: D1566 15

Standard Terminology Relating to


Rubber1
This standard is issued under the fixed designation D1566; the number immediately following the designation indicates the year of
original adoption or, in the case of revision, the year of last revision. A number in parentheses indicates the year of last reapproval. A
superscript epsilon () indicates an editorial change since the last revision or reapproval.

1. Scope D1415 Test Method for Rubber PropertyInternational


1.1 This terminology covers definitions of technical terms Hardness
used in the rubber industry. Terms that are generally under- D1646 Test Methods for RubberViscosity, Stress
stood or adequately defined in other readily available sources Relaxation, and Pre-Vulcanization Characteristics
are not included. (Mooney Viscometer)
D1765 Classification System for Carbon Blacks Used in
1.2 Definitions for terms that have been established by other Rubber Products
bodies recognized as expert in the field will, after ballot D3053 Terminology Relating to Carbon Black
approval, be inserted in this terminology without change, and D5992 Guide for Dynamic Testing of Vulcanized Rubber
the source of the definition will be identified. Exceptions to this and Rubber-Like Materials Using Vibratory Methods
rule will be where the meaning of the term as used in the rubber D6085 Practice for Sampling in Rubber Testing
industry is different from the common meaning of the term. Terminology and Basic Concepts
1.3 Users of this terminology who require mathematical E6 Terminology Relating to Methods of Mechanical Testing
expressions for the time and temperature dependent physical E20 Practice for Particle Size Analysis of Particulate Sub-
properties of some terms found in this standard should refer to stances in the Range of 0.2 to 75 Micrometres by Optical
Guide D5992 and other standards listed under referenced Microscopy (Withdrawn 1994)3
documents. Selected terms from Guide D5992 may be found in E28 Test Methods for Softening Point of Resins Derived
Annex A1. from Pine Chemicals and Hydrocarbons, by Ring-and-
1.4 Although this terminology standard avoids the inclusion Ball Apparatus
of jargon and archaic terms as much as possible, some terms E111 Test Method for Youngs Modulus, Tangent Modulus,
have been retained for historical reasons. and Chord Modulus
E126 Test Method for Inspection, Calibration, and Verifica-
2. Referenced Documents tion of ASTM Hydrometers
2.2 ISO Standards:4
2.1 ASTM Standards:2
1382-82 Rubber-Vocabulary Second Edition (Addendum
D412 Test Methods for Vulcanized Rubber and Thermoplas-
16-18-1998)
tic ElastomersTension
D925 Test Methods for Rubber PropertyStaining of Sur- 3. Terminology
faces (Contact, Migration, and Diffusion)
D1076 Specification for RubberConcentrated, Ammonia abrasion, nsurface loss of a material due to frictional forces.
Preserved, Creamed, and Centrifuged Natural Latex
abrasion resistance index, nmeasure of the abrasion resis-
D1148 Test Method for Rubber Deterioration
tance of a rubber relative to that of a standard rubber under
Discoloration from Ultraviolet (UV) or UV/Visible Radia-
the same specified conditions, expressed as a percentage.
tion and Heat Exposure of Light-Colored Surfaces
accelerated life test, ntest method designed to approximate
in a short time, the deteriorating effect of normal long-term
1
This terminology is under the jurisdiction of ASTM Committee D11 on Rubber service conditions.
and is the direct responsibility of Subcommittee D11.08 on Terminology.
Current edition approved Nov. 1, 2015. Published December 2015. Originally accelerator, delayed action, naccelerator that, in conjunc-
approved in 1957. Last previous edition approved in 2014 as D1566 14. DOI: tion with other curing agent(s), produces, at vulcanizing
10.1520/D1566-15.
The boldface designations refer to the original source of the definition and the
ASTM technical committee having jurisdiction.
2 3
For referenced ASTM standards, visit the ASTM website, www.astm.org, or The last approved version of this historical standard is referenced on
contact ASTM Customer Service at service@astm.org. For Annual Book of ASTM www.astm.org.
4
Standards volume information, refer to the standards Document Summary page on Available from International Organization for Standardization (ISO), 1 rue de
the ASTM website. Varemb, Case postale 56, CH-1211, Geneva 20, Switzerland.

Copyright ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, PO Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959. United States

1
D1566 15
temperatures, a period of no significant cross-linking, fol- ageing, oxygen bomb, nprocess of exposing materials to the
lowed by a period of rapid cross-link formation. action of oxygen at an elevated temperature and pressure.
accelerator (rubber), ncompounding material used in small ageing, shelf, nageing during storage.
amounts with a vulcanizing agent to increase the speed of
alloy, nunique composition of two or more polymers that has
vulcanization.
one or more of the polymers treated or processed in a special
DISCUSSIONProperties of a vulcanizate are changed by the type or
amount of accelerator used.
way to confer enhanced performance characteristics on the
resulting material.
activator, ncompounding material used in small proportions
to increase the effectiveness of an accelerator. anticoagulant (natural rubber latex), nsubstance added to
field latex from Havea brasiliensis or to guayule latex to
adhesion, ncondition in which surfaces are held together by retard bacterial action which would otherwise cause rapid
chemical or physical forces or both. coagulation of the latex.
DISCUSSIONThe word stabilizer is often used in place of antico-
adhesion failure, nloss of structural integrity due to the agulant in latex terminology.
separation of two bonded surfaces at the bond interface.
antidegradant, ncompounding material used to retard dete-
adhesion value, nforce required to cause adhesion failure. rioration caused by oxidation, ozone, light, and combina-
DISCUSSIONAny separation occurring at any other point, for tions of these.
example, inside either component under test, is a failure of the DISCUSSIONAntidegradant is a generic term for such additives as
component material, and such separation should not be considered as antioxidants, antiozonants, and waxes.
indicating adhesion strength.
antiflex cracking agent, ncompounding material used to
adhesive failure, nseparation of two bonded surfaces that retard cracking caused by cyclic deformations.
occurs within the bonding material.
DISCUSSIONAdhesive failure occurs when the adhesive strength of antifoaming agent, nagent that inhibits bubble formation in
a bonding material is greater than its cohesive strength. an agitated liquid, usually by reducing the surface tension.

aftercure, ncontinuation of the process of vulcanization after antioxidant, ncompounding material used to retard deterio-
the energy source has been removed. ration caused by oxidation.

age resistance, nability of a material to resist deterioration antiozonant, ncompounding material used to retard deterio-
caused by ageing. ration caused by ozone.

agglomerate, compounding material, ncluster of particles antistatic agent, nmaterial which reduces the tendency for
of one or more compounding materials loosely held together. accumulation of electric charge on the surface of an article.
apparent density, nSee density, bulk, the preferred term.
agglomerate, latex, ncluster of rubber particles in a colloidal
aqueous suspension of such particles. aromatic oil, nhydrocarbon process oil containing at least
35 %, by mass, of aromatic hydrocarbons.
agglomerates, nclusters of particles of compounding mate-
rials contained in a continuous rubber phase. ash, nresidue from incineration of a material under specified
conditions.
agglomeration (latex), nreversible or irreversible joining
together of latex particles. autoclave (rubber), npressure vessel used for vulcanizing
rubber products by means of steam under pressure.
ageing (act of), nexposure of materials to a deteriorating
environment for a specified time interval. backrinding, nmolding defect in which the rubber adjacent
to the spew line shrinks below the surface of the molded
ageing (rubber), nirreversible change of material properties product, with the spew line often being ragged and torn.
during exposure to a deteriorating environment, for a speci-
fied time interval. bag cure, nmethod of vulcanization in which an inflated
flexible bag is used to impart positive internal pressure on
ageing, accelerated, nexposure of rubber to a test environ- the article being vulcanized.
ment with the intent of producing, in a shorter time period,
effects similar to normal ageing. balata, nhard thermoplastic consisting of approximately
equal proportions of trans-polyisoprene and resin, obtained
ageing, air bomb, nprocess of exposing materials to the from trees of the Sapotaceae family.
action of air at an elevated temperature and pressure.
bale coating, ncoating applied to surfaces of rubber bales
ageing, air oven, nprocess of exposing materials to the that inhibits adhesion to other surfaces.
action of air at an elevated temperature at atmospheric
pressure. ball mill, nclosed rotating cylinder containing hard balls (or
other shaped members) that serves to grind coarse materials
ageing, natural, nageing under normal service conditions. to a finer particle size.

2
D1566 15
bank (mill, calender, or spreader), nreservoir of material at DISCUSSIONThe appearance of the unique shape of the particles of
the opening between rolls (mill or calender), or at the this material is only apparent in finished goods or products that contain
spreader bar. particles having a dimension greater in size than 600 m (30 mesh).

batch, nproduct of one mixing operation. bulk density, nmass per unit volume of a material, including
any voids present.
bench marks, ntwo marks of known separation applied to a
specimen to measure the strain of the specimen during bumping, molding process, napplication, release, and reap-
extension. plication of pressure prior to the start of vulcanization to vent
entrapped gases, thereby facilitating complete filling of the
black scorch, nsignificant, reversible increase in the elastic mold.
properties of a rubber compound due to interactions between
the polymer and carbon black. calender, nmachine with two or more parallel, counter-
DISCUSSIONThe term black scorch is not related to scorch. rotating rolls with a controllable, roll-to-roll spacing, rotat-
ing at selected surface speeds and controlled temperatures,
blank, nportion of a rubber compound of suitable volume to used for sheeting, laminating, skim coating (topping) and
fill the cavity of a mold. friction coating, to a controlled thickness and/or surface
bleeding, nexuding of a liquid compounding material from condition.
the surface of a vulcanized or unvulcanized rubber. carbon black, nmaterial consisting essentially of elemental
blister(s), nsurface or internal imperfection(s), produced by carbon in the form of near-spherical colloidal particles and
entrapped gases or other volatiles, during the manufacture of coalesced particle aggregates of colloidal size, obtained by
rubber articles. partial combustion or thermal decomposition of
hydrocarbons. D3053
block copolymer, npolymer consisting of alternating groups
of monomer units, typically in the sequence A-B-A, where carbon black, thermal, ntype of carbon black produced
group A contains a set of identical monomer units and group under controlled conditions by the thermal decomposition of
B contains a different set of identical monomer units. hydrocarbons in the absence of air or flames.
DISCUSSIONThese grades are designated with an N first character
bloom (rubber), nliquid or solid material that has migrated and a second character of 8 or 9 in Table 1 of Classification D1765.
to the surface of a rubber and generally changes the surface D3053
appearance.
carbon black, thermal, acetylenic, nthermal black pro-
blow, nvolume expansion that occurs during the production duced from acetylene gas D3053
of cellular or sponge rubber.
carbon gel (carbon-rubber-gel), nportion of rubber that is
blowing agent, ncompounding material used to produce gas not leached by a solvent under specified conditions, from an
by chemical or physical action, or both, in the manufacture intimate mixture of carbon black and unvulcanized rubber.
of hollow or cellular articles.
carcass, nfabric, cord, or metal reinforced section, or all
booster, nsynonym for secondary accelerator, which is the three, of a rubber product as distinguished from the rubber
preferred term. tube, cover, or tread.
bound monomer, nmonomer that is combined or reacted cell, nsingle small cavity surrounded partially or completely
with itself or other types of monomers in a polymerization by walls.
reaction to form a polymer.
DISCUSSIONThis term is used in synthetic rubber production, and cell, closed, ncell totally enclosed by its walls, hence not
the bound monomer is normally expressed as a percentage of total interconnecting with other cells.
polymer.
cell, open, ncell not totally enclosed by its walls and hence
bound rubber, nnonvulcanized polymer attached to a filler interconnecting with other cells.
through any combination of absorption, chemisxorption,
physical entrapment, or crosslinking of free molecules; the cellular material, ngeneric term for materials containing
polymer-filler combination is insoluble in solvents that many cells (either open, closed, or both) dispersed through-
normally dissolve the polymer. out the mass.
branched polymer, npolymer that has side chains of the cellular material, collapse, nundesirable densification of a
same monomer composition as the main chain attached at cellular material resulting from the breakdown of its cellular
points along the main chain. structure.
buffing rubber, nparticulate rubber produced as a byproduct cellular material, cored, ncellular material containing a
of the buffing operation in the carcass preparation stage of a multiplicity of holes (usually, but not necessarily, cylindrical
tire retreading; characterized by a wide range of particle in shape), molded or cut into the material in some pattern
sizes that are predominately elongated or acicular in shape. normally perpendicular to the largest surface, and extending
See particulate rubber. part or all the way through the piece.

3
D1566 15
cellular material, flexible, ncellular organic polymeric ma- colorfast, rubber, nability of a rubber compound to resist
terial that will not rupture when a specimen 200 by 25 by 25 changes in color.
mm (8 by 1 by 1 in.) is bent around a 25-mm (1-in.) diameter
colorfast rubber, na rubber compound that resists changes
mandrel at a uniform rate of one lap in 5 s at a temperature
in color.
between 18 and 29C.
comonomer, none of two or more monomer species that
cellular rubber, nrubber products containing cells or hollow polymerize to form a copolymer.
receptacles which may be open, interconnecting, or closed
and not interconnecting. complex shear modulus, G*, nratio of shear stress to shear
strain, where both may include elastic and viscous compo-
cellular striation, ncondition characterized by a layer within nents.
a cellular material that differs greatly from the characteristic
cell structure. complex Youngs modulus, E*, nratio of normal stress to
normal strain, where both may include elastic and viscous
cement, rubber, nadhesive that is either a liquid dispersion components, typically measured at low strains.
or solution of raw or compounded rubber, or both.
compound, nintimate admixture of a polymer(s) with all the
centrifuged rubber latex, nlatex, the rubber concentration materials necessary for the finished article.
of which has been increased by the removal of water by
centrifugal force. compound, standard, ncontrol or reference compound pre-
pared according to a prescribed formula and mixing proce-
chalking (rubber), nformation of a powdery residue on the dure.
surface of a rubber, commonly resulting from surface
compounding ingredient, nSee compounding material, the
degradation.
preferred term.
chatter marks, ndefect on calendered sheeting consisting of compounding material, nsubstance used as part of a rubber
transverse narrow bands of alternately thicker and thinner mix.
material.
compression molding, nmolding process in which the
coagent, ncompounding ingredient used in small amounts to material is placed directly in the mold cavity and compressed
increase the crosslinking efficiency of certain non-sulfur to shape by closure of the mold.
vulcanizing systems, or to modify the properties given by
such systems. compression set, nresidual deformation of a material after
DISCUSSIONThe term is usually identified with additives used to removal of the compressive stress.
modify vulcanization by organic peroxides.
conditioning (environmental), nstorage of a rubber, under
coagulant dipping (latex), ndipping process in which the specified conditions (time, temperature, humidity) prior to
product form is first immersed in a coagulant solution, testing.
withdrawn, dried, and then immersed in the latex. conditioning (mechanical), nprescribed program of defor-
coagulating agent, nany material used to transform a liquid mation of a specimen prior to testing.
or colloid system into a curdlike, semisolid, or solid-state continuous vulcanization, nprocess where a shaped article
system. passes without pause through conditions designed to create a
DISCUSSIONThe transformation permits a separation of the solid vulcanization reaction.
from the remaining liquid by a chemical reaction and interaction, but
not by evaporation or freezing. conventional sulfur vulcanizing system, nas applied to
natural and isoprene rubbers and butadiene-based synthetic
coagulation (rubber latex), nirreversible agglomeration of rubbers, a vulcanizing system using a relatively high pro-
particles originally dispersed in a rubber latex. portion of sulfur in which the combined sulfur exists
coagulum (latex), nundesirable, irreversible, agglomeration predominantly in the polysulfidic cross links chain modifi-
of rubber particles retained on a 180-m mesh screen. D1076 cations.
DISCUSSIONThe amount of free sulfur and the ratio of free sulfur to
coated fabric, nflexible product composed of a textile fabric accelerator will vary from rubber to rubber.
and an adherent polymeric material applied to one or both copolymer, npolymer formed from two different monomers.
surfaces.
copolymerization, npolymerization of two or more different
cohesive failure (bonded assembly), nrupture occurring monomers into a single polymer.
entirely within any single uniform layer of the assembly.
coupling agent, na material that promotes a bond between a
cold checks, ndefect on calendered sheeting consisting of polymer and a filler, or between a polymer and an additive.
surface roughness.
cracker, nheavy-duty mill having two deeply corrugated or
cold flow (unvulcanized rubber), nslow deformation, under pyramid-cut rolls for breaking down a rubber or a mix, or for
gravitational force, at or below room temperature. cutting rubber or a mix into pieces.

4
D1566 15
cracks, nfissure(s) originating in the surface of a rubber desiccant, ncompounding material used to irreversibly ab-
vulcanizate or product as a result of natural weathering. sorb moisture present (in a rubber mix) particularly for the
purpose of minimizing risk of porosity during vulcanization.
cracks, flex, nfissures originating in the surface of a rubber
vulcanizate, resulting from cyclic deformation (usually devulcanization, ndestruction of the chemical crosslinks in
bending). a vulcanized rubber.

crack(s), ozone, nfissure(s) originating in the surface of a die, cutting, nsingle planar form having sharpened edges
rubber vulcanizate, caused by exposure to an ozone- that is forced, in a fixed or rotating fashion, upon a material,
containing environment; these fissures are perpendicular to thus resulting in a desired shape.
the direction of strain, and usually occur in rubbers having die, extruder, norifice with a specific geometry through
main chain unsaturation. which material is forced, causing the extrudate to have a
specific profile.
crazing, nformation of a random pattern of shallow cracks
on a rubber surface usually due to ageing by light. die swell, ndifference between the dimensions of the cross
DISCUSSIONUnlike ozone cracking, crazing does not depend on the section of an extrudate and the corresponding dimensions of
presence of a tensile strain in the rubber. the die orifice by which the extrudate is formed.
DISCUSSIONIt is usually quantified as the percentage increases in the
creaming (rubber latex), nreversible process of concentra- cross-sectional area.
tion by gravitational force of rubber particles near the bottom
or top of the latex. diene polymer, npolymer formed from one or more mono-
mer species, at least one of which is a diolefin.
creep, ntime-dependent part of a strain resulting from stress.
diene rubber, npolymer having unsaturated carbon in the
crosslink, nchemical bond bridging one polymer chain to main chain, derived from butadiene or a substituted butadi-
another. ene.

crosslink density, nnumber of crosslinks per unit mass or dipping (latex), nprocess in which a layer of rubber is
volume of vulcanizate. deposited on a mold or form as a result of immersion in a
DISCUSSIONThe units of crosslink density will indicate whether it is bath of compounded latex.
per unit mass or per unit volume. dispersing agent (latex), nsurface-active substance used to
crosslinking (the act of), nformation of chemical bonds facilitate the suspension of solid compounding materials in a
between polymer chains to give a network structure. liquid medium and to stabilize the dispersion thereby pro-
duced.
crowsfeet, nsmall flowmarks of V-shape on calendered
dispersion (the act of), napplication of shearing forces to
sheeting.
distribute one or more compounding materials uniformly
crystallization, polymer, narrangement of previously disor- throughout the mass of a continuum of material.
dered polymer segments of repeating patterns into geometric dough (rubber), npaste-like mass of smooth texture, con-
symmetry. sisting of a rubber mix and solvent; it is used for spreading.
cure, nSee vulcanization, the preferred term. dumbbell specimen (rubber), nflat specimen having a
narrow straight central portion of essentially uniform cross
cure meter, ntesting device that measures the progress of
section with enlarged ends. D412
vulcanization at a vulcanizing temperature.
DISCUSSIONThe measured property, normally proportional to the durometer, ninstrument for measuring the indentation hard-
complex dynamic modulus, is recorded at closely spaced time intervals ness of rubber.
to produce a quasi-continuous measured property versus time curve.
dusting, napplication of a powder to a rubber surface,
cure rate, ntime-dependent progress of vulcanization, mea- generally to prevent adhesion to another surface.
sured as a change in vulcanizate properties per unit time,
dynamic vulcanizate, nSee thermoplastic vulcanizate, the
where this rate varies over the time period.
preferred term.
curing agent, nsynonym for vulcanizing agent, the preferred dynamic vulcanization, nprocess of intimate melt mixing a
term. thermoplastic polymer and a suitable reactive rubbery poly-
delta Mooney value, nmeasure of the processability of a mer to generate a thermoplastic elastomer with a chemically
non-pigmented emulsion SBR based on the difference in cross-linked rubbery phase resulting in properties close to
viscosity recorded at specific times by a Mooney viscometer. those of a thermoset rubber when compared to the same
cross-linked composition.
density, nmass per unit volume of a material. E126, E20
ebonite, nhard material made by sulfur vulcanization of
density, bulk, nmass per unit volume of a material, includ- rubber, in which the hardness is substantially obtained by the
ing any voids present. action of the sulfur.

5
D1566 15
efficient vulcanizing (EV) systems, nas applied to natural extrusion, ncontinuous shaping of a material during plastic
rubbers and isoprene- and butadiene-based synthetic passage through a die.
rubbers, a vulcanizing system making efficient use of sulfur
extrusion mark (score line), nmark formed on an extrudate
and producing at optimum cure a network containing a
during the extrusion process either by accident or intent.
preponderance of thermally stable monosulfidic crosslinks.
DISCUSSIONEV systems are comprised of a sulfur donor or a fatigue, dynamic, ndeterioration of a material by repeated
combination of low concentration of free sulfur (for example, <0.5 deformation. See fatigue breakdown.
parts per hundred parts of rubber), or both, at a comparatively high
concentration of accelerator(s). fatigue breakdown, ndeterioration of an elastomeric prod-
elastic, adjof or pertaining to elasticity. uct during repeated deformation.

elastic limit, ngreatest stress that a material is capable of fatigue life, nnumber of deformations required to produce a
sustaining, without any permanent strain remaining, upon specified state of fatigue breakdown in a test specimen or
complete release of the stress. E6, E28 product that is deformed under a prescribed set of condi-
tions.
elastic (storage) shear modulus, G, nratio of the shear
stress component in phase with the shear strain, to the shear field latex, nSee latex, field.
strain. filler, nsolid compounding material, usually in finely divided
elastic Youngs modulus, E, nratio of the normal stress form, which may be added in relatively large proportions to
component in phase with the normal strain, to the normal a polymer for technical or economic reasons.
strain, typically measured at low strains. filler, inert, nfiller having no reinforcing effect.
elasticity, nrapid recovery of a material to its approximate
flash, nexcess material protruding from the surface of a
initial shape and dimensions after substantial deformation by
molded article at the mold junctions.
force and subsequent release of that force.
flat cure, nsynonym for plateau vulcanization.
elastomer, nan elastic polymer.
flex life, nnumber of cycles required to produce a specified
elongation, nextension produced by a tensile stress.
state of failure in a specimen that is flexed in a prescribed
elongation, percent, nextension of a uniform section of a method.
specimen expressed as percent of the original length.
DISCUSSIONElongation, % = flexometer, nmachine that subjects a test specimen to
repeated deformation by compression, tension, shear,
~ final length 2 original length! bending, torsion, or any combination thereof.
3 100
original length
flocculation, nformation (sometimes reversible) of loosely
elongation, ultimate, nelongation at the time of rupture.
coherent, partially agglomerated rubber, distributed in the
emulsifying agent (latex), nsurface-active substance used to liquid phase of a latex.
facilitate the dispersion of an immiscible liquid compound-
flow marks, nmarks or line on a molded product, caused by
ing material in another liquid and to stabilize the emulsion
imperfect fusion of flowing fronts.
thereby produced.
foam stabilizer (latex), nsubstance used in the preparation
emulsion polymerization, nprocess in which one or more
of latex foam, before gelation, drying, and vulcanization to
monomers are dispersed in a micelle generating medium
help maintain the foam cell structure.
(such as soap or surfactants, or both) to form a stable,
colloidal, aqueous dispersion for the purpose of carrying out foaming agent (latex), nsubstance used to facilitate the
an addition polymerization reaction. formation of suspended gas in latex during the production of
DISCUSSIONThe resulting product is a colloidally dispersed polymer latex foam.
system known as latex.
former (latex), nshaped object on which a rubber article is
expanded rubber (sponge), ncellular rubber having closed produced by dipping into a latex, from which the article is
cells, made from solid rubber compound. subsequently removed.
extender, norganic material used to augment the polymer in
formula, nlist of the materials and their amounts used in the
a compound.
preparation of a compound.
extensometer, ndevice for determining elongation of a
friction coat, calender, nlayer of rubber compound applied
specimen as it is strained.
to a fabric by shearing action so that it impregnates the
extrudate, nmaterial that issues from an extruder. fabric.
extruder, nmachine designed to force a rubber or rubber mix friction coating, napplying a rubber coat (friction coat) on a
through an orifice, which is often shaped to the geometry of textile by shearing action so that the coat impregnates the
the desired product. textile.

6
D1566 15
friction ratio, nratio of surface speeds of two adjacent rolls (0.08 in.) to 12-mm (0.47 in.) range confers on that material the title
(mill, calender, or refiner). ground rubber, despite a substantial fraction of particles in a much
smaller particle dimension range.
frosting, nformation of a matte, whitish appearance on a
rubber surface exposed to air, resulting from the action of ground vulcanized rubber, nvulcanized rubber in particu-
ozone; often confused with bloom. late form; used as an extender or filler.

furnace carbon black, ntype of carbon black produced by guayule natural rubber, nnaturally occurring cis-1,4-
the decomposition reaction of hydrocarbons when injected polyisoprene obtained from the shrub, Parthenium argenta-
into a high velocity stream of combustion gases under tum.
controlled conditions. D3053 gum compound, nrubber compound containing only those
gasket (mechanical), ndeformable material clamped be- ingredients necessary for vulcanization and small amounts
tween essentially stationary faces to prevent the passage of of other ingredients for processing, coloring, and for improv-
matter through an opening or joint. ing the resistance to ageing.

gate (injection or transfer mold), norifice through which a gutta-percha, nhard thermoplastic substance, mainly trans-
shaped cavity in a mold is filled with material. polyisoprene obtained from trees of the Sapotaceae family.

gauge length, nknown distance between bench marks. hard rubber, ndeprecated term, see ebonite.

gel, dry rubber, nportion of unvulcanized rubber insoluble hardness, nphysical property of a rubber vulcanizate, char-
in a chosen solvent. acterized by resistance to indentation.

gel, latex, nsemi-solid system consisting of a network of heat buildup, naccumulation of thermal energy generated
aggregates in which liquid is held. within a material as a result of hysteresis, evidenced by an
increase in temperature.
gel rubber, nthat portion of raw rubber insoluble in a
specific solvent, in which, in the absence of crosslinking, the heat-sensitive dipping (latex), ndipping process in which a
raw rubber would be soluble. heated form is immersed in latex containing a substance that
causes the latex to gel at an elevated temperature.
gel time, nperiod of time from the initial mixing of the
reactants of a plastic or rubber composition to the time when heat sensitizer, ngelling agent effective only at elevated
gelation occurs as defined by a specified test. temperature.
gelling (latex), nformation of a uniform coagulum from Hevea natural rubber, nnaturally occurring cis-1,4-
which the aqueous phase has not been separated. polyisoprene obtained from the tree, Hevea brasiliensis.
grain, nanisotropy introduced into rubber during processing holland cloth, ncompletely filled woven fabric (usually
operations. starch-filled linen) with a smooth glass-like finish on both
sides, used as a separating medium for raw rubber and
granulated rubber, nparticulate rubber composed of mainly rubber compounds.
non-spherical particles that span a broad range of maximum
particle dimension from below 425 m (40 mesh) to 12 homogenization (raw rubber), nrepeated passage of raw
mm (0.47 in.); the key feature of this type of particulate rubber through a mill or other mixing device, under specified
rubber is the fraction of the material in the greater than 1-mm conditions, to ensure uniformity.
(0.08-in.) up to 12-mm (0.47-in.) maximum particle dimen-
homopolymer, npolymer formed from a single monomer
sion range. See particulate rubber.
DISCUSSIONFor any particulate rubber, any measurable fraction, for
species.
example, 0.1 % of particles in the greater than 2-mm (0.08-in.) to hose, nflexible conduit consisting of a tube, reinforcement,
12-mm (0.47-in.) range confers on that material the title granulated
rubber, despite a substantial fraction of particles in a much smaller
and usually an outer cover.
particle dimension range. hose assembly, nlength of hose with a coupling attached to
green strength, ncharacteristic property of a raw rubber or one or each end.
an unvulcanized rubber compound that indicates resistance hydrocarbon resins, nplastic materials made by the polym-
to deformation when stress is applied. erization of monomers composed on only hydrogen and
ground rubber, nparticulate rubber composed of mainly carbon.
non-spherical particles that span a range of maximum hysteresis, nconversion of mechanical energy to heat in
particle dimension from well below 425 m (40 mesh) to rubber undergoing strain.
2 mm (0.08 in.) as a maximum particle dimension. See DISCUSSIONHysteresis is accompanied by a phase shift in which the
particulate rubber. strain lags behind the stress, producing damping forces essentially
DISCUSSIONFor any particulate rubber, any measurable fraction, for independent of frequency. See Guide D5992.
example 0.1 % of particles in the greater than 425-m (40 mesh) to
2-mm (0.08 in.) range with no particles in the greater than 2-mm hysteresis loss, nloss of mechanical energy due to hysteresis.

7
D1566 15
impact resistance, nresistance to fracture under shock force. macromolecular material, nSee polymer, the preferred term.
inhibitor, nmaterial used to suppress a chemical reaction. marching modulus curve, ntype of vulcanization during
which the increasing modulus does not reach a maximum
injection molding, nprocess by which a rubber compound is
value.
forced into a closed mold by pressure other than the mold
clamping force. masterbatch, nhomogeneous mixture of rubber and one or
more materials in known proportions for use as a raw
isotactic, npolymeric molecular structure containing a se-
material in the preparation of the final compounds.
quence of regularly spaced asymmetric atoms arranged in DISCUSSIONMasterbatches are used to facilitate processing or
like configuration in the polymer chain. enhance the properties of the final product, or both.
knuckles, nsmall tough rubber pieces scattered throughout a mastication, nbreakdown or softening of raw rubber, or a
bale of raw rubber that do not disperse easily or accept mix by the combined action of mechanical work (shear) and
carbon black and other compounding materials during mix- atmospheric oxygen, sometimes accelerated by the use of a
ing. peptizer and frequently at elevated temperatures.
latex, creamed, nlatex, the rubber concentration of which maturation (latex), ncontrolled storage of compounded
has been increased by creaming and removal of the separated latex before processing, which allows stabilization and
serum. escape of air bubbles, optimizes dispersion of ingredients,
latex, creaming, nreversible process consisting of gravita- and allows partial pre-vulcanization of rubber particles.
tional accumulation of rubber particles surrounded by serum, microhardness, nhardness measured with an instrument
near the top or bottom of the latex. having a smaller indentor and applying a lower force than
DISCUSSIONThis is generally accomplished by adding a creaming the standard instrument, permitting measurements on
agent.
smaller specimens or thinner sheets that are not amenable to
latex, creaming agent, nmaterial added to latex to promote measurement by normal instruments.
creaming. See latex, creaming. DISCUSSIONMicrohardness refers to the instrument and procedure
used and not a property of the rubber.
latex, field, nnatural rubber latex from Hevea brasiliensis
with or without a preservative and prior to concentration or mill, nmachine used for rubber mastication, mixing, or
any other processing. sheeting, having two counter-rotating rolls with adjustable
DISCUSSIONThe preservative is added to maintain the original state longitudinal axis separation that usually rotate at different
of the latex as it comes from the tree. speeds.
latex, guayule, nnatural rubber latex from Parthenium mineral rubber, ncompounding material (not a rubber)
argentatum, produced by processing the shrub and purifying prepared from petroleum asphalt and used as a tackifier,
and concentrating the latex, and with or without the addition softener, or extender.
of preservatives or stabilizers, or both.
mix, nadequate mixture of rubber in any form with other
latex, mechanical stability, nthe ability of latex to resist material(s).
coagulation under the influence of mechanical agitation
mixer, nmachine that incorporates and disperses compound-
latex rubber, ncolloidal aqueous dispersion of rubber. ing ingredients into rubber to form a mix or a compound,
through the action of mechanical work (shear).
leaching (latex), nprocess in which latex articles are washed
in water to remove water-soluble substances. mixer, internal, nmachine with a closed cavity in which a
DISCUSSIONLeaching is used to improve clarity, prevent blooming specially shaped rotor(s) masticates the rubber or incorpo-
of hydrophilic materials, and reduce water absorption in the finished rates and disperses compounding materials, or both, into the
rubber articles. rubber.
liquid curing medium (LCM), nmolten phase, generally a modulus, tensile, nSee tensile stress at given elongation,
molten mixture of sodium nitrate, that is used as a heating the preferred term.
medium for the continuous vulcanization of a rubber mix,
usually following extrusion. modulus, Youngs, nratio of normal stress to corresponding
strain for tensile or compressive stresses below the propor-
loss angle, , nmeasure of the extent (phase shift) that the tional limit of the material. E111, E28
fundamental sinusoidal component of complex stress leads DISCUSSIONproportional limit, the greatest stress that a material is
the fundamental sinusoidal component of dynamic strain in capable of sustaining without any deviation from proportionality of
a steady-state sinusoidal deformation. stress to strain (Hookes law). E6, E28
lot, nmass or collection of articles of similar composition mold, na device containing one or more cavities in which a
and characteristics. substance can be shaped.
lubricant (mold), nSee release agent (mold), the preferred mold cavity, ndesignated void that produces a geometrically
term. defined shape.

8
D1566 15
mold lubricant, nsynonym for release agent (mold). oligomer, npolymer consisting of only a few monomer units
such as a dimer, trimer, tetramer, and the like, or their
mold marks, nsurface imperfection transferred to a molded mixtures.
product from corresponding marks on a mold.
optimum cure, nstate of vulcanization at which a desired
molding, compression, nprocess of forming a material to a property value or combination of property values is ob-
desired shape by flow induced by a force applied after a tained.
material is placed in the mold cavity.
organosol, nsuspension of a finely divided polymer in a
molding, injection, nprocess of forming a material by plasticizer together with a volatile organic liquid.
forcing it from an external heated chamber through a sprue
(runner, gate) into the cavity of a closed mold by means of oscillating disc cure meter, ntest device for determining
a pressure gradient that is independent of the mold clamping vulcanization parameters, in which a rotationally oscillating
force. disc is embedded in a rubber specimen in a closed heated
cavity and the resistance of the rubber to disc rotation
molding, transfer, nprocess of forming a material by forcing measured versus time.
it from an auxiliary heated chamber through a sprue hole
(runner, gate) into the cavity of a closed mold by means of overcure, nstate of vulcanization cure beyond the state of
a pressure gradient that is dependent on the mold clamping optimum cure.
DISCUSSIONOvercure is generally caused by too long a time or too
force.
high a temperature of vulcanization or post-vulcanization, or both, or a
molding shrinkage, ndifference in dimensions between a surplus of vulcanizing agents, or both.
molded product and the mold cavity in which it was molded, packing (mechanical), ndeformable material used to pre-
both the mold and product being at normal room temperature vent or control the passage of matter between surfaces that
when measured. move in relation to each other.
molecular mass, nsynonym for molecular weight. paraffinic oil, nhydrocarbon process oil, most or all of which
is composed of alkanes
molecular weight, nratio of the mass of a molecule to
one-twelfth (112) of the mass (1.6605 10-27 kg) of a particulate rubber, nrubber, vulcanized or unvulcanized,
carbon-12 atom, or the sum of the atomic weights of the that has been transformed into a collection of particles, with
atoms in a molecule. or without a coating of a partitioning agent to prevent
agglomeration during production, transportation, or storage
monomer, nlow molecular weight substance consisting of (see buffing rubber, granulated rubber, ground rubber,
molecules capable of reacting with like or unlike molecules and powdered rubber).
to form a polymer.
DISCUSSIONDefinition approved by IUPAC. parting line, nanother name for spew line.
Mullins Effect, nsoftening of a vulcanized rubber (reduction Payne Effect, nin the low amplitude dynamic testing of
in the stress at a given strain) as a result of previous filled rubbers, the decrease in modulus (G or E) as the
deformation. amplitude of deformation is increased.
DISCUSSIONThe effect is caused by a decrease in the additive
naphthenic oil, nhydrocarbon process oil containing more contributions of polymer-polymer interactions, hydrodynamic effects,
than 30 %, by mass, of naphthenic hydrocarbons. the polymer-filler and filler-filler interactions.

necking, nlocalized reduction in cross section that may peptizer (dry rubber), ncompounding material used in
occur in a material under tensile stress. small proportions to accelerate, by chemical action, the
softening of rubber under the influence of mechanical action,
nerve, nelastic resistance of unvulcanized rubber or rubber or heat, or both.
mixes to permanent deformation.
permeability, npermeation rate divided by the pressure
network, nthree-dimensional reticulate structure formed by gradient of the gas or vapor. For a homogeneous material
interchain or intrachain bonding of polymer molecules in that obeys Ficks law, the permeability is equal to the
combination with chain entanglements. product of the diffusion coefficient and the solubility coef-
ficient of the gas or vapor.
nip, nradial clearance between rolls of a mill or calendar on DISCUSSIONPressure gradient is the pressure differential divided by
a line of centers. the distance between opposite faces of a solid body.
non-fill, ndefect resulting from the failure of the rubber to fill DISCUSSIONHomogeneous material is a typical polymer that may
out all the mold pattern detail. contain fillers or curatives, or both, uniformly distributed throughout
the mass.
non-sulfur vulcanizing system, nvulcanizing system not
requiring free or donated sulfur. permeance, npermeation rate divided by the pressure differ-
ential of a gas or vapor between opposite faces of a solid
O-ring, nSee seal, O-ring. body.

9
D1566 15
DISCUSSIONPressure differential is the difference in gas or vapor powdered rubber, nparticulate rubber composed of mainly
pressure across opposite faces of a solid body. non-spherical particles that have a maximum particle dimen-
permeation rate, nflow rate of a gas or vapor, under sion equal to or below 425 m (40 mesh). See particulate
specified conditions, through a prescribed area of a solid rubber.
body, divided by that area. prebake resistance, ndeprecated term, see precure heat
pick, nindividual filling yarn of a fabric. tolerance (adhesives).

piece, test, nsee specimen, the preferred term. D6085 precoagulum, ncoagulum resulting from the partial inadver-
tent coagulation of a latex.
pigment, ninsoluble compounding material used to impart
color. precrosslinked rubber, na rubber compound that has been
DISCUSSIONThe use of pigment as a substitute for compounding vulcanized to a limited extent, but that may be further
material is discouraged. formed and vulcanized to a final product state.
plasticity, ncharacteristic of unvulcanized rubber indicated precure heat tolerance (adhesives), namount of exposure
by the degree of retention of deformation after removal of (at a certain time and temperature) prior to bonding that a
the deforming force. cure-activated adhesive system can tolerate without signifi-
cant impairment of its adhesion potential.
Plasticity Retention Index (PRI), nthe ratio of a plasticity
number measured after air-oven ageing, under specified preservative (latex), nsubstance added to uncompounded
conditions, to a plasticity number measured before ageing. latex before or after concentration to inhibit putrefaction and
DISCUSSIONThis is widely interpreted as a measure of oxidation accompanying coagulation.
resistance of raw natural rubber.
prevulcanizate, nlatex rubber that has been through a
plasticizer, ncompounding material used to enhance the vulcanization reaction to retain its dispersed emulsion char-
deformability of a polymeric compound. acter.
plastisol, nsuspension of a finely divided polymer in a prevulcanization inhibitor (PVI), ncompounding material
plasticizer. that increases the time to incipient vulcanization of a rubber
plastometer, ninstrument for measuring the plasticity of a mix.
material. DISCUSSIONUnlike a retarder, a PVI does not significantly affect the
vulcanization rate.
plateau, vulcanization, nvulcanization during which the
value of a desired property proceeds to a maximum or primary accelerator, nprincipal highest concentration ac-
minimum and then remains essentially constant for a sub- celerator used in a vulcanizing system.
stantial period after the initial change. process oil, nhydrocarbon oil derived from petroleum or
polymer, nsubstance consisting of molecules characterized other sources, used as an extender or process aid.
by the repetition (neglecting ends, branch junctions, and processability, nrelative ease with which raw or com-
other minor irregularities) of one or more types of mono- pounded rubber can be handled in rubber machinery.
meric units.
processing, aid, ncompounding material that improves pro-
polymer network, nthree-dimensional reticulate structure cessability of a polymeric compound by reducing nerve,
formed by chemical or physical linking of polymer chains. providing better dispersion of dry material, increasing the
polymerization, nformation of a polymer by the chemical extension rate, reducing power consumption during mixing,
reaction of monomers. producing smoother surfaces on calendered and extruded
products, and improving knitting to name a few examples.
poromer, nSee poromeric material, the preferred term.
proofing, nprocess of coating a fabric with raw or com-
poromeric material, nflexible synthetic leather-like material pounded rubber to impede penetration by a liquid, usually
that is permeable to air and water vapor and usually resistant water.
to water penetration and abrasion.
proofing (the act of), nprocess of coating a fabric with
porosity, npresence of numerous small cavities. rubber.
portion, test, nsee sample, the preferred term. D6085 qualification test, ntest of a particular product or material
post cure, nheat or radiation treatment, or both, to which a design to meet use specifications which are design driven,
cured or partially cured thermosetting plastic or rubber and do not change from lot to lot.
DISCUSSIONIn specifications and test methods, this test may be
composition is subjected, to enhance the level of one or more
referred to as a type test.
properties.
recipe, nformula, mixing procedure, and any other instruc-
pot life, nperiod of time during which a reacting thermoset-
tions needed for the preparation of a product.
ting plastic or rubber composition remains suitable for its
intended use, after mixing with a reaction-initiating agent. reclaim, nSee reclaimed rubber, the preferred term.

10
D1566 15
reclaimed rubber, nvulcanized rubber treated by a combi- rubber, nmaterial that is capable of recovering from large
nation of heat, chemical agents, and intense kneading to give deformations quickly and forcibly, and can be, or already is,
a material with essentially its prevulcanized plasticity, which modified to a state in which it is essentially insoluble (but
is useful as a rubber compounding material. can swell) in boiling solvent, such as benzene, methyl ethyl
ketone, or ethanol-toluene azeotrope.
recovery, ndegree to which a rubber product returns to its DISCUSSIONA rubber in its modified state, free of diluents, retracts
normal dimensions after being distorted. within 1 min to less than 1.5 times its original length after being
stretched at room temperature (18 to 29C) to twice its length and held
referee test, ntest made to settle a disagreement as to the for 1 min before release.
conformance to specified requirements, or conducted by a
third party to arbitrate between conflicting results. rubber, bound, nportion of the rubber in a mix that is so
closely associated with the filler as to be unextractable by the
refiner, ntwo-roll mill with a high friction ratio, used for usual rubber solvents.
such operations as processing of reclaimed rubber or slightly
scorched mixes and the crushing of impurities. rubber, cellular, closed cell, ncellular material in which
practically all the individual cells are nonconnecting. ISO
reinforcement, nact of increasing the mechanical perfor- 1382-82
mance capability of a rubber by the incorporation of mate-
rials that do not participate significantly in the vulcanization rubber, crude, nSee rubber, raw, the preferred term.
process. rubber, expanded, ncellular rubber having closed cells
reinforcing agent, nmaterial, not basically involved in the made from a solid rubber compound.
vulcanization process, used in rubber to increase the resis- rubber, gel, nportion of rubber insoluble in a chosen solvent.
tance of the vulcanizate to mechanical forces. (See also rubber, sol.)
release agent (mold), nsubstance applied to the inside rubber, glass transition temperature, napproximate mid-
surface of a mold or added to a material to be molded, to point of the temperature range over which a reversible
facilitate removal of the product from the mold. change in an amorphous polymer or in amorphous regions of
resilience, nratio of energy output to energy input in a rapid a partially crystalline polymer occur from (or to) a viscous or
(or instantaneous) full recovery of a deformed specimen. rubbery condition to (or from) a hard and relatively brittle
one.
resilience, impact, nratio of output to input mechanical
energy in a rapid deformation and recovery cycle of a rubber rubber, hard, nSee ebonite.
specimen. rubber, natural, ncis-1,4-polyisoprene that is obtained from
resin, norganic material of indefinite and relatively high plant sources, including Hevea brasiliensis and Parthenium
molecular mass that may be used as a softener, processing argentatum.
aid, vulcanizing agent, or reinforcing agent. rubber, oil-extended, ngrade of raw rubber containing a
resistivity, volume, nratio of the electric potential gradient relatively high proportion of processing oil.
to the current density when the gradient is parallel to the rubber, raw, nnatural or synthetic elastomer, usually in
current in the material. bales or packages, that is the starting material for the
retarder, nmaterial used to reduce the tendency of a rubber manufacture of rubber articles.
compound to vulcanize prematurely. rubber, skim, nrubber obtained by coagulating the rubber in
retracted spew, ndeprecated term, see backrinding. the serum that separates out during the concentration of
natural rubber latex.
reversion (vulcanization), ndeterioration of vulcanizate
properties that may occur when vulcanization time is ex- rubber, sol, nportion of rubber soluble in a chosen solvent.
tended beyond the optimum. (See also rubber, gel.)
rubber, sponge, ncellular rubber consisting predominantly
root-mean-square strain, nsquare root of the mean value of
of open cells and made from a dry rubber compound.
strain squared and averaged over one cycle of a sinusoidal
deformation. rubber, synthetic, nrubber produced by polymerizing one or
more monomers with or without post-polymerization chemi-
root-mean-square stress, nsquare root of the mean value of
cal modification.
stress squared and averaged over one cycle of a sinusoidal
deformation. rubber, the vulcanized compound, ncrosslinked elastic
material compounded from an elastomer, susceptible to large
rotorless cure meter, ntest device for measuring vulcaniza-
deformations by a small force and capable of rapid, forceful
tion and rheological parameters, in which a rubber specimen
recovery to approximately its original dimensions and shape
is enclosed in a heated die cavity with one surface oscillating
upon removal of the deforming force.
and the resistance of the rubber to these oscillations is
measured versus time. rubber, virgin(s), nobsolete term. See wet spots.

11
D1566 15
rubber hardness degree, international, nmeasure of accelerator concentrations between those of a conventional
hardness, the magnitude of which is derived from the depth sulfur vulcanizing system and an EV system.
of penetration of a specified indentor into a specimen as
serum, (latex), ndispersion medium of a rubber latex, or the
described in Test Method D1415.
DISCUSSIONThe scale is so chosen that 0 would represent a
solution remaining, after either coagulation or centrifuga-
material showing no measurable resistance to indentation, and 100 tion.
would represent a material showing no measurable indentation.
set, nstrain remaining after complete release of the force
rubber latex, centrifuged, nlatex, the rubber concentration producing the deformation.
of which has been increased by the removal of serum by set after break, nset of a test piece after stretching it to
centrifugal force. rupture.
rubber latex, evaporated, nlatex, the rubber concentration sheeting, nprocess of converting a rubber, rubber mix,
of which has been increased by evaporation of some of the rubber dough, or latex into a sheet.
water.
shelf life, nSee storage life, shelf.
rubber latex, preserved, nrubber latex treated to inhibit
putrefaction and accompanying coagulation. shock load, nsudden application of an external force.
rubber latex, prevulcanized, nrubber latex in which the skim coat, calender, nlayer of rubber compound applied to
particles have been sufficiently vulcanized to produce films a fabric by pressure normal to the surface.
and useful articles by drying only. skim coating (the act of), nprocess of applying a thin layer
rubber latex, stabilized, nrubber latex treated to inhibit of rubber or rubber mix to a sheet material by means of a
premature coagulation. calender, without shear forces, between the rubber and the
sheet.
rubber products, nitems of commerce in which the major
portion of the filler-bearing material is a rubber. skim rubber, nrubber obtained from the dilute latex that is
separated during the concentration of natural rubber latex.
rubberize, nto impregnate or coat, or both, a substrate with
rubber. skin, nrelatively dense layer at the surface of a cellular
polymeric material.
runner (injection or transfer mold), nsecondary feed
channel for transferring material under pressure from the skin, applied, nthin surface layer of elastomeric material
inner end of the sprue to the cavity gate. applied to a cellular product.
salt bath, nheat transfer apparatus, utilizing molten salts as sludge, nundesirable residue in rubber latex.
the heating medium, generally used for vulcanization. See DISCUSSIONCoagulum is not classified as sludge.
liquid curing medium (LCM). softener, ncompounding material used to produce a mix of
sample, nportion or unit(s) selected to represent the lot. reduced viscosity, which facilitates incorporation of rubber
additives.
scorch, npremature vulcanization of a rubber compound.
solution polymerization, nprocess in which monomers
scorch, Mooney, ntime to incipient cure of a compound dissolved in a common solvent react to form a polymer.
when tested in the Mooney shearing disk viscometer under
specific conditions (see Test Methods D1646). specimen, npiece of material appropriately shaped and
prepared so that it is ready to use for a test.
seal (mechanical), nany material or device that prevents or
controls the passage of matter across the separable members spew line, nline on the surface of a molded product at the
of a mechanical assembly. junction of the mold parts.
DISCUSSIONSeal (mechanical) is considered to be a generic term sponge rubber, nporous elastic material with interconnect-
for such words as gasket (mechanical), packing (mechanical), and ing cells, generated by gas release in the material prior to
seal O-ring as described herein.
vulcanization.
seal, O-ring, nproduct of precise dimensions molded in one
spring constant, K, nratio of the normal force component in
piece to the configuration of a torus with circular cross
phase with the normal deformation, to the normal deforma-
section, suitable for use in a machined groove for static or
tion.
dynamic service.
sprue, nmaterial remaining in the sprue hole after molding.
secondary accelerator, naccelerator used in smaller concen-
trations compared to the primary accelerator, to achieve a sprue hole, npassageway through which a rubber is forced
faster rate of vulcanization. into a mold.
semi-efficient vulcanizing (semi-EV) system, nas applied stabilizer, dry rubber, nsubstance present in or added to raw
to natural rubber and isoprene- and butadiene-based syn- rubber to maintain properties at or near their initial values
thetic rubbers, a vulcanizing system having sulfur and during its production, processing, and storage.

12
D1566 15
stabilizer, (latex), nsubstance occurring naturally in or DISCUSSIONThis sulfur is bound to organic constituents (organically
added to latex that prevents agglomeration or coagulation of combined sulfur, for example, rubber, vulcanized oil) or to inorganic
the rubber particles during processing and/or compounding. constituents (inorganically combined sulfur, for example, barium
sulfate), or to both.
stabilizer (rubber), nsubstance present in or added to raw sulfur, extractable, nall the sulfur removed by a solvent
rubber to maintain the properties at or near their initial from a rubber mix or vulcanizate.
values during drying, processing, and storage.
sulfur, free, nideally, the uncombined sulfur in a rubber mix
stain, contact, ndiscoloration of a product by another or vulcanizate.
material or product in the area of direct contact. DISCUSSIONPractically, the analyses for free sulfur determine el-
DISCUSSIONA test for direct surface discoloration of rubber covered emental sulfur, coordinately bound sulfur, and organically bound
by Test Method D1148. D925 reactive sulfur, such as that in disulfides and polysulfides.

stain, diffusion, ndiscoloration of a light-colored veneer or sulfur, total, nall the sulfur present in a material, irrespective
coating, caused by the diffusion of staining materials from of its chemical form or origin.
the rubber through the veneer or coating. sulfur donor vulcanizing system, nvulcanizing system in
DISCUSSIONThe veneer or coating is in direct intimate contact with which there is no elemental sulfur present and all of the
the underlying rubber. D925 sulfur available for the crosslinking is provided by the partial
stain, migration, ndiscoloration, caused by volatile constitu- decomposition of sulfur-containing materials.
ents of a rubber, that occurs on any portion of the surface of swelling, nincrease in volume of a specimen immersed in a
any object in the proximity of or adjacent to but not in direct liquid or exposed to a vapor.
contact with the rubber causing the stain. D925
tack, rubber, nproperty that causes contacting surfaces of
state of cure, nrelative extent or degree of vulcanization. unvulcanized rubber to adhere to each other.
stiffener, ncompounding material used to increase the vis- tackifier, ncompounding material that enhances the ability of
cosity of an unvulcanized rubber mix. vulcanized rubber to adhere to itself or another material.

stiffness, bending, nforce required to produce a bent con- tan delta (tan ), nratio of the viscous (loss) modulus to the
figuration under specified conditions. elastic (storage) modulus in a sinusoidal deformation;
mathematically, the tangent of the loss angle, .
stock, nSee compound, the preferred term.
tear (rubber), nmechanical rupture initiated and propagated
storage hardening, nincrease in the viscosity of raw or at a site of high stress concentration caused by a cut, defect,
unvulcanized rubber during storage. or localized deformation.
DISCUSSIONThis differs from low-temperature crystallization by not
being thermally reversible.
tear strength, nmaximum force required to tear a specified
specimen, the force acting substantially parallel to the major
storage life, shelf, nperiod of time after production during axis of the test specimen.
which a material or product, that is stored under specified
tensile green modulus, nratio of stress to strain of a raw
conditions, retains its intended performance capabilities.
rubber or an unvulcanized rubber compound that indicates
strain, nunit change, due to force, in the size or shape of a resistance to tensile deformation or strain.
body referred to its original size or shape. E6, E28 tensile green strength, nyield stress of a raw rubber or an
strain amplitude, nratio of the maximum deformation to the unvulcanized rubber compound that indicates loss of resis-
free dimension of the unrestrained test piece. tance to tensile deformation or strain.

strainer, nmachine designed to force a rubber or rubber mix tensile modulus, nsee tensile stress at given elongation, the
through a sieve or sieves to remove extraneous material. preferred term.
tensile set, nextension remaining after a specimen has been
stress, nintensity, at a point in a body, of the internal forces
stretched then allowed to retract in a specified manner
(or components of force) that act on a given plane through
expressed as a percentage of the original length.
the point.
DISCUSSIONStress is expressed in force per unit area. As used in tensile strength, nmaximum tensile stress applied during
tension, compression, or shear, stress is calculated on the basis of the stretching a specimen to rupture.
original dimensions of the appropriate cross section of the test piece.
tensile stress, nstress applied to stretch a test piece (speci-
stress relaxation, ndecrease in stress after a given time at men).
constant strain.
tensile stress at given elongation, nstress required to stretch
sulfur, combined, nsulfur remaining in a vulcanizate after the uniform cross section of a test specimen to a given
extraction by a prescribed method. elongation.

13
D1566 15
tension fatigue, nfracture, through crack growth, of a twist, yarn, nnumber of turns, about its axis, per unit of
component or test specimen subjected to a repeated tensile length, observed in a yarn or other textile strand.
deformation.
ultra accelerator, nhighly active accelerator for fast vulca-
tension set, nsee tensile set, the preferred term. nization and often used for low-temperature vulcanization.
terpolymer, npolymer formed from three monomer species. undercure, nstate of vulcanization between the onset of
thermal degradation, nirreversible and undesirable change vulcanization and the state of optimum cure.
in the properties of a material due to exposure to heat.
urethane foam, (flexible), nopen cell, elastomeric material
thermoplastic, npolymer that repeatedly can be softened by made by the addition reaction of a polyol with a polyisocya-
heating and hardened by cooling through a temperature nate.
range characteristic of the polymer, and in the softened state
can be shaped into articles. UV absorber, ncompounding material that, through its
ability to absorb ultraviolet radiation and render it harmless,
thermoplastic, adjcapable of being repeatedly softened by retards the deterioration caused by sunlight and other UV
heating and hardened by cooling through a characteristic light sources.
temperature range, and which in the softened, flowable state
can be shaped into articles. viscoelasticity, ncombination of viscous and elastic proper-
ties in a material with the relative contribution of each being
thermoplastic elastomer (TPE), ndiverse family of rubber- dependent on time, temperature, stress, and strain rate.
like materials, that, unlike conventional vulcanized rubbers,
can be processed and recycled like thermoplastic materials. viscosity, nresistance of a material to flow under stress.
thermoplastic vulcanizate, nthermoplastic elastomer with a viscosity, Mooney, nmeasure of the viscosity of a rubber or
chemically cross-linked rubbery phase, produced by dy- rubber compound determined in a Mooney shearing disk
namic vulcanization. viscometer (see Test Methods D1646).
thermoset, npolymer which changes into a non-flowable, viscous (loss) shear modulus, G, nratio of the shear stress
infusible, insoluble material upon vulcanization by heat or component 90 out of phase with the shear strain, to the
other means. shear strain.
thermoset, adjcapable of becoming a non-flowable, viscous (loss) Youngs modulus, E, nratio of the normal
infusible, insoluble material upon vulcanization by heat or stress component 90 out of phase with the normal strain, to
other means. the normal strain, typically measured at low strains.
thickener (latex), nsubstance used to raise or control the void, cellular material, ncavity unintentionally formed in a
viscosity of latex without making major changes in the total cellular material and substantially larger than the character-
solids content. istic individual cells.
threshold strain (ozone testing), nhighest tensile strain at
volatile fatty acid (VFA) number (of latex), nnumber of
which a rubber specimen can be exposed continually to an
grams of potassium hydroxide equivalent to the volatile fatty
ozone-containing environment without development of
acids in a latex sample containing 100 g of total solids.
ozone cracks.
DISCUSSIONThe value of the threshold strain depends on the vulcanizate, nproduct of vulcanization, a crosslinked rubber.
composition of the rubber, the ozone concentration, temperature, the
nature of the strain (static or dynamic), and ultraviolet light exposure. vulcanization, nirreversible process during which a rubber
topping (the act of), nSee skim coating (the act of), the compound, through a change in its chemical structure (for
preferred term. example, crosslinking), becomes less plastic and more resis-
tant to swelling by organic liquids, while elastic properties
transition, first order, nreversible change in phase of a are conferred, improved, or extended over a greater range of
material; in the case of polymers, usually crystallization or temperature.
melting.
vulcanized vegetable oil, ncompounding material made by
transition, glass, nreversible physical change in a material heating unsaturated vegetable oil with cross-linking agents;
from a viscous or rubbery state to a brittle, glassy state. it is used as a processing aid or extender.
DISCUSSIONThe midpoint of the temperature range over which this
transition takes place is commonly termed the glass transition tem- vulcanizing agent, ncompounding material that produces
perature. crosslinking in rubber.
transition, second order, nsee transition, glass.
vulcanizing system, ncombination of vulcanizing agent and,
twist (amount of), nnumber of turns per unit length of yarn as required, accelerators, activators, and retarders used to
or textile strand (or of a product such as cable or hose) produce the desired vulcanization characteristics or vulcani-
around its axis. zate characteristics.

14
D1566 15
warm-up (rubber processing), nreduction in viscosity of a wet spots, nlocal patches of high moisture content in raw
rubber or rubber mix, by mechanical work and heat to render rubber.
it suitable for further processing. DISCUSSIONWet spots tend to resist breakdown on mastication and
not take up carbon black on mixing as readily as the dry matrix
water absorption, namount of water absorbed by a material (rubber).
under specified test conditions. wetting agent (latex), nsubstance used to reduce the surface
tension of latex and thereby facilitate spreading or impreg-
water repellency (coated fabric), nproperty of being resis-
nation of a surface by the latex.
tant to wetting by liquid water.
wicking, ntransmission of a gas or liquid, due to a pressure
water resistance (coated fabric), nproperty of retarding differential or capillary action, along fibers incorporated in a
both penetration and wetting by liquid water. rubber product.
waterproofness (coated fabric), nproperty of impenetrabil- yield point, nthat point on the stress-strain curve, short of
ity by liquid water. ultimate failure, where the rate of stress with respect to strain
goes through a zero value and may become negative.
weathering, nsurface deterioration of a rubber article during
outdoor exposure. yield strain, nlevel of strain at the yield point.
DISCUSSIONExamples are checking, cracking, or crazing. yield stress, nlevel of stress at the yield point.

ANNEX

(Mandatory Information)

A1. ADDITIONAL DEFINITIONS

A1.1 The following list of definitions is taken from Guide contact area, nin an unbonded specimen, that area in contact
D5992. These definitions were written as a set, and appear in with a high-modulus fixture, and through which applied
Guide D5992 in related groups rather than in alphabetical forces pass; may or may not be constant, and if lubricated,
order. For teaching they are best read from Guide D5992, since may deliberately be allowed to change.
to some extent they depend on each other and lead logically damping, nthat property of a material or system that causes
from one to another. Because this is a terminology document it to convert mechanical energy to heat when subjected to
they are listed here in alphabetical order. deflection; in rubber, the property is caused by hysteresis; in
some types of systems, it is caused by friction or viscous
A1.2 Not all the definitions in Guide D5992 are included
behavior.
here. Those omitted deal more with equipment and analysis
than with elastomers themselves. damping, adjas a modifier of dynamic force, descriptive of
that component of complex force leading dynamic deflection
A1.3 There are some duplications between the definitions in by 90, and that is responsible for the conversion of
the main body of this terminology and those in this Annex. mechanical energy to heat; denoted by the double prime (")
Those in the main body were in existence prior to the writing as a superscript symbol, as F".
of Guide D5992.
delta, , nin the measurement of rubber properties, the
bond area, nin describing a bonded test specimen, the symbol for the phase angle by which the dynamic force leads
cemented area between elastomer and high-modulus attach- the dynamic deflection; mathematically true only when the
ment member. two dynamic waveforms are sine waves (Synonym loss
angle).
bonded, adjin describing a test specimen, one in which the
elastomer to be tested is permanently cemented to members dynamic, adjin testing, descriptive of a force or deflection
of much higher modulus for two purposes: (1) to provide function characterized by an oscillatory or transient
convenient rigid attachment to the test machine, and (2) to condition, as contrasted to a static test.
define known areas for the application of forces to the dynamic, adjas a modifier of stiffness or modulus, descrip-
elastomer. tive of the property measured in a test employing an
oscillatory force or motion, usually sinusoidal.
complex, adjas a modifier of dynamic force, descriptive of
the total force; denoted by the asterisk (*) as a superscript elastic, adjas a modifier of dynamic force, descriptive of that
symbol (F*); F* can be resolved into elastic and damping component of complex force in phase with dynamic
components using the phase of displacement as reference. deflection, that does not convert mechanical energy to heat,

15
D1566 15
and that can return energy to an oscillating mass-spring Mullins Effect, nthe phenomenon occurring in vulcanized
system; denoted by the single prime (') as a superscript rubber whereby the second and succeeding hysteresis loops
symbol, as F'. exhibit less area than the first, due to breaking of physical
cross-links; may be permanent or temporary, depending on
equivalent viscous damping, c, nat a given frequency, the
the nature of the material. (See also preflex effect.)
quotient of F"(1) divided by the velocity of the imposed
deflection. phase angle, nin general, the angle by which one sine wave
c 5 F" ~ 1 ! /X* ~ 1 ! leads another; units are either radians or degrees.
DISCUSSIONThe equivalent viscous damping is useful when dealing
preflex effect, nthe phenomenon occurring in vulcanized
with equations in many texts on vibration. It is an equivalent only at the
frequency for which it is calculated. rubber, related to the Mullins Effect, whereby the dynamic
moduli at low strain amplitude are less after a history to high
hysteresis, nthe phenomenon taking place within rubber strains than before. (See also Mullins Effect.) (Also called
undergoing strain that causes conversion of mechanical strain history effect.)
energy to heat, and which, in the rubbery region of
behavior (as distinct from the glassy or transition regions), shear, adjdescriptive of properties measured using a speci-
produces forces essentially independent of frequency. (See men deformed in shear, for example, shear modulus.
also hysteretic and viscous.) static, (1), adjin testing, descriptive of a test in which force
hysteresis loop, nthe Lissajous figure, or closed curve, or deflection is caused to change at a slow constant rate,
formed by plotting dynamic force against dynamic deflec- within or in imitation of tests performed in screw-operated
tion for a complete cycle. universal test machines.

hysteresis loss, nper cycle, the amount of mechanical energy static, (2), adjin testing, descriptive of a test in which force
converted to heat due to straining; mathematically, the area or deflection is applied and then is truly unchanging over the
within the hysteresis loop, having units of the product of duration of the test, often as the mean value of a dynamic test
force and length. condition.
hysteretic, adjas a modifier of damping, descriptive of that static, (3), adjas a modifier of stiffness or modulus, descrip-
type of damping in which the damping force is proportional tive of the property measured in a test performed at a slow
to the amplitude of motion across the damping element. constant rate.
loss angle, nsynonym for delta (). stiffness, nthat property of a specimen that determines the
force with which it resists deflection, or the deflection with
loss factor, nsynonym for tandel (tan) (). which it responds to an applied force; may be static or
lubricated, adjin describing an elastomeric test specimen dynamic (See also complex, elastic, damping.)
having at least two plane parallel faces and to be tested in (Synonymspring rate).
compression, one in which the plane parallel faces are storage, adjas a modifier of energy, descriptive of that
separated from plane parallel platens of the apparatus by a component of energy absorbed by a strained elastomer that is
lubricant, thereby eliminating, insofar as possible, friction not converted to heat and is available for return to the overall
between the elastomer and platens, permitting the contact mechanical system; by extension, descriptive of that com-
surfaces of the specimen to expand in area as the platens are ponent of modulus or stiffness that is elastic.
moved closer together.
unbonded, adjin describing a test specimen, one in which
modulus, nthe ratio of stress to strain; that property of a the elastomer is molded or cut to shape, but that otherwise
material which, together with the geometry of a specimen, demands that forces be applied directly to the elastomer.
determines the stiffness of the specimen; may be static or
dynamic, and if dynamic, is mathematically a vector viscous, adjas a modifier of damping, descriptive of that type
quantity, the phase of which is determined by the phase of of damping in which the damping force is proportional to the
the complex force relative to that of deflection. (See also velocity of motion across the damping element, so named
complex, elastic, damping.) because of its derivation from an oil-filled dashpot damper.

16
D1566 15
ASTM International takes no position respecting the validity of any patent rights asserted in connection with any item mentioned
in this standard. Users of this standard are expressly advised that determination of the validity of any such patent rights, and the risk
of infringement of such rights, are entirely their own responsibility.

This standard is subject to revision at any time by the responsible technical committee and must be reviewed every five years and
if not revised, either reapproved or withdrawn. Your comments are invited either for revision of this standard or for additional standards
and should be addressed to ASTM International Headquarters. Your comments will receive careful consideration at a meeting of the
responsible technical committee, which you may attend. If you feel that your comments have not received a fair hearing you should
make your views known to the ASTM Committee on Standards, at the address shown below.

This standard is copyrighted by ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor Drive, PO Box C700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959,
United States. Individual reprints (single or multiple copies) of this standard may be obtained by contacting ASTM at the above
address or at 610-832-9585 (phone), 610-832-9555 (fax), or service@astm.org (e-mail); or through the ASTM website
(www.astm.org). Permission rights to photocopy the standard may also be secured from the Copyright Clearance Center, 222
Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, Tel: (978) 646-2600; http://www.copyright.com/

17

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen