What is peroxide crosslinking?
Peroxide crosslinking is a type of Vulcanisation, in which peroxides are used as Crosslinking chemicals can be used. Peroxide crosslinking is used in particular in the production of heat- and media-resistant elastomers and, in principle, elastomers that cannot be used for the production of sulphur-crosslinkable are, like HNBR, FKM or silicones (VMQ, FVMQ).
How does peroxide cross-linking work?
When exposed to heat, organic peroxides decompose into free radicals that release hydrogen atoms from the polymer chains. The activated sites of the polymer chains combine to form permanently cross-linked structures. Peroxides require precise temperature control (typically 160-200°C), otherwise they either do not react or decompose too early.
Typical peroxide types:
- Dicumyl peroxide (DCP)
- Benzoyl peroxide (BPO)
- t-butyl peroxides
- Special peroxides for low decomposition temperatures or long pot lives
They are added to the rubber compound in pure form or as a masterbatch and are usually combined with co-crosslinkers or stabilisers.
Advantages:
- High Temperature resistance
- High Ageing- and media resistance
- Homogeneous cross-linking even with thick-walled parts
- No sulphur emissions
Disadvantages:
- Higher costs than with Sulphur crosslinking
- Less elasticity than with Sulphur crosslinking
Applications of peroxide cross-linked rubbers:
- Seals, O-rings, spring elements with high temperature and media resistance
- Rubber-Metal Composite Parts in an oil or fuel environment
- Medical and electrical engineering with silicone elastomers
- Special compounds for vapour, brake fluid or aggressive media