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JW Latex Consultants (and Rubber Consultants,乳胶顾问) offer solutions to your problems in Natural Rubber latex and Synthetic Rubber latex processing and the manufacturing of latex products (condoms, catheters, medical gloves, baby teats and soothers, toy balloons etc) Quick answers through e-mails are possible at reasonable cost.

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

The Language of Rubber - Part 1 (Tensile Stress, Strain and Tensile Strength)

Tensile stress is the stress (force per unit of the cross-sectional area) required to produce a given strain (or elongation). This is commonly known as the "Modulus", a term which usually causes some confusion among engineers when they first deal with the physical properties of rubbers.

To the engineers, modulus when applied to steel, is the stress divided by the strain i.e. a ratio which is a constant. For rubber, the modulus is the co-ordinates of a particular point on the stress-strain curve and is expressed as the stress per unit area (e.g. kg/cm2 or psi).

Strain is commonly referred to as the elongation or the rubber under stress i.e. the extension of a test specimen produced by the tensile force and is expressed as a percentage of the original length.

Ultimate elongation is the elongation at the time rupture during the stretching of the specimen. This is commonly known as elongation at break.

Tensile strength is the stress at the time of rupture.

To a rubber technologist, the tensile strength, tensile stress and ultimate elongation are of utmost importance for compound development, quality control and for accessing the suitability or the resistance of the compound to deterioration by external factors such as heat,ozone,oxygen weathering exposure and chemicals such as oil and solvents.

One should take note that despite the importance mentioned above, the significance of tensile properties is questionable when comparing different rubbers. A good example is the case of the tyre industry when it switched from using natural rubber to synthetic rubber during World War II. The tread compound based on synthetic rubber with lower tensile strength (~ 175 kg/cm2)compared to that of natural rubber (350 kg/cm2) was found to be performing as satisfactorily as those based on natural rubber.

You are at the site for answers and solutions to all your problems in natural rubber latex processing and manufacturing of industrial, household and medical gloves, condoms, catheters, baby teats and baby pacifiers, toy balloons, latex foam products, latex threads etc.

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Rubber Chemicals: Carcinogenicity, Mutagenicity, Clastogenicity.

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Assessment of Latex Stability

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Poor Flocking Quality Of Household Gloves

Creaming of Latex

What is Vulcanization?

History of Latex Dipped Products

Applications of Prevulcanized Latex

Defoamer Creating Havoc in Glove Factory

Problems With Milling Rubber Chemicals

Medical Gloves From Guayule Latex

Introduction to SMG Gloves

 

 

Click on The Following Links to Read More Articles:

[Advantages of Vulcanization] [Applications of PV Latex] [Bacteria and Latex] [Chemical Toxicity] [Cross-Linking Density] [Biodegradability] [Black Articles] [Blooming] [Bouncing Ball] [Compression Set] [Condoms] [Creaming] [Defoamer] [FDA] [Fatty Acid Soaps] [Flame Retardant] [Flocking] [Food Packaging] [Glove Demand] [Glove Selection] [Guayule Latex] [History of Gloves] [Joul Effect] [Latex Stability] [Latex Thread] [Milling Problem] [MREPC Articles] [Nano Polymer Particles] [Nano ZnO] [Polychloroprene] [REACH] [SMG] [Storage Hardening] [Vulcanization] [Vytex] [Yulex]

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