Abstract
The achievement of sufficient dispersion of vulcanization accelerators is critical to tailoring superior cross-linked elastomers. Modern recipes rely on multicomponent formulations with silica particles covered by coupling agents. We study the molecular properties of select accelerators in polyisoprene melts and their affinity for functionalized surfaces via extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. We focus on the common (N-cyclohexyl)-2-benzothiazole sulfenamide (CBS), 1,6-Bis((dibenzylthiocarbamoyl)disulfanyl) hexane (DBTH) and diphenyl guanidine (DPG) molecules and their mixing characteristics at curing temperatures. Our results support a low association affinity for CBS and DBTH with polyisoprene, whereas DPG forms small hydrogen-bonded aggregates. Subsequently, we examine systems in contact with silica interfaces, bare or grafted with (3-Mercaptopropyl) triethoxysilane (MPTES), (3- Octanoylthio) 1-propyl-triethoxysilane (NXT), and bis (triethoxypropyl) disulfide (TESPD). Accelerator-substrate affinity is first assessed at infinite dilution using free energy calculations and subsequently at finite concentrations. Accelerators exhibit high substrate affinity (DPG >CBS >DBTH) irrespective of functionalization. However, coupling agents are able to displace from the surface a significant amount that increases with the grafting density and the size of the coupling agent. Finally, we investigate the behavior of DPG in binary DPG-CBS formulations, where the former can act as a covering agent that solubilizes CBS into the bulk polymer
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting information
Description
Average cluster size as a function of time for the various accelerators and concentrations in cPI 30melts; estimated accelerator diffusion coefficient in cPI melts and various concentrations.
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