Rubber vs. Elastomer

By Jaxson

  • Elastomer

    An elastomer is a polymer with viscoelasticity (i.e., both viscosity and elasticity) and has very weak intermolecular forces, generally low Young’s modulus and high failure strain compared with other materials. The term, a portmanteau of elastic polymer, is often used interchangeably with rubber, although the latter is preferred when referring to vulcanisates. Each of the monomers which link to form the polymer is usually a compound of several elements among carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and silicon. Elastomers are amorphous polymers maintained above their glass transition temperature, so that considerable molecular reconformation, without breaking of covalent bonds, is feasible. At ambient temperatures, such rubbers are thus relatively compliant (E ≈ 3 MPa) and deformable. Their primary uses are for seals, adhesives and molded flexible parts. Application areas for different types of rubber are manifold and cover segments as diverse as tires, soles for shoes, and damping and insulating elements. The importance of these rubbers can be judged from the fact that global revenues are forecast to rise to US$56 billion in 2020.IUPAC defines the term “elastomer” by “Polymer that displays rubber-like elasticity.”Manufacturers of Elastomeric parts include NoProto, PrintForm, 3D Systems, and Afformativ.

    Rubber-like solids with elastic properties are called elastomers. Polymer chains are held together in these materials by relatively weak intermolecular bonds, which permit the polymers to stretch in response to macroscopic stresses. Natural rubber, neoprene rubber, buna-s and buna-n are all examples of such elastomers.

    Elastomers are usually thermosets (requiring vulcanization) but may also be thermoplastic (see thermoplastic elastomer). The long polymer chains cross-link during curing, i.e., vulcanizing. The molecular structure of elastomers can be imagined as a ‘spaghetti and meatball’ structure, with the meatballs signifying cross-links. The elasticity is derived from the ability of the long chains to reconfigure themselves to distribute an applied stress. The covalent cross-linkages ensure that the elastomer will return to its original configuration when the stress is removed. As a result of this extreme flexibility, elastomers can reversibly extend from 5–700%, depending on the specific material. Without the cross-linkages or with short, uneasily reconfigured chains, the applied stress would result in a permanent deformation.

    Temperature effects are also present in the demonstrated elasticity of a polymer. Elastomers that have cooled to a glassy or crystalline phase will have less mobile chains, and consequentially less elasticity, than those manipulated at temperatures higher than the glass transition temperature of the polymer.

    It is also possible for a polymer to exhibit elasticity that is not due to covalent cross-links, but instead for thermodynamic reasons.

Wikipedia
  • Rubber (noun)

    Pliable material derived from the sap of the rubber tree; a hydrocarbon polymer of isoprene.

  • Rubber (noun)

    Synthetic materials with the same properties as natural rubber.

  • Rubber (noun)

    An eraser.

  • Rubber (noun)

    A condom.

  • Rubber (noun)

    Someone or something which rubs.

  • Rubber (noun)

    One who rubs down horses.

  • Rubber (noun)

    One who practises massage.

  • Rubber (noun)

    The rectangular pad on the pitcher’s mound from which the pitcher must pitch.

    “Jones toes the rubber and then fires to the plate.”

  • Rubber (noun)

    Water resistant shoe covers, galoshes, overshoes.

    “Johnny, don’t forget your rubbers today.”

  • Rubber (noun)

    Tires, particularly racing tires.

    “Jones enters the pits to get new rubber.”

  • Rubber (noun)

    In relation to a series of games or matches between two competitors where the overall winner of the series is the competitor which wins a majority of the individual games or matches:

  • Rubber (noun)

    The entire series, of an odd number of games or matches in which ties are impossible (especially a series of three games in bridge or whist).

  • Rubber (noun)

    A rubber match; a game or match played to break a tie.

  • Rubber (noun)

    The game of rubber bridge.

  • Rubber (adjective)

    Not covered by funds on account.

  • Rubber (verb)

    To eavesdrop on a telephone call

  • Rubber (verb)

    To rubberneck; to observe with unseemly curiosity.

  • Elastomer (noun)

    any polymer having the elastic properties of rubber

Wiktionary
  • Rubber (noun)

    a tough elastic polymeric substance made from the latex of a tropical plant or synthetically

    “a rubber plantation”

    “a rubber dinghy”

    “heat and sunlight may cause rubber to deteriorate”

  • Rubber (noun)

    a piece of rubber used for erasing pencil or ink marks

    “a pencil with a rubber at the end”

  • Rubber (noun)

    rubber boots; galoshes.

  • Rubber (noun)

    a condom.

  • Rubber (noun)

    a contest consisting of a series of successive matches (typically three or five) between the same sides or people in cricket, tennis, and other games

    “the opening rubber of Britain’s Davis Cup tie against Argentina”

  • Rubber (noun)

    a deciding game in a rubber of cricket, tennis, etc.

  • Rubber (noun)

    a unit of play in which one side scores bonus points for winning the best of three games

    “she supplemented her income with her winnings at rubber bridge”

    “the total score, including 700 for the rubber, was 2,620”

Oxford Dictionary

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