The present invention relates to a tyre innerliner compound.
Here and hereinafter, ‘innerliner’ is intended to mean an inner rubber layer substantially impermeable to air, and which is used in tubeless tyres, i.e. tyres with no inner tube, to maintain air pressure inside the carcass. The innerliner must also ensure oxygen is effectively retained inside the carcass, and prevented from spreading to and deteriorating other parts of the tyre.
The term ‘curing system’ is intended to mean substances, such as sulphur and accelerants, capable of cross-linking a polymer base.
Innerliner compounds generally have a halobutyl rubber matrix, which, though expensive, provides for better impermeability than other polymer bases.
One way of improving the impermeability of an innerliner is to make it thicker. As anyone skilled in the art knows, however, a thicker innerliner is more expensive to produce, and increases the weight of the tyre, thus increasing overall vehicle fuel consumption and rolling resistance.
Demand therefore exists for increasingly thinner innerliners, but with no impairment in impermeability.
One way of increasing the impermeability of innerliners without making them thicker is to use a compound with special fillers, which, if properly mixed, produce a steric hindrance capable of greatly improving the impermeability of the innerliner. In other words, when mixed with the polymer base, fillers such as clay, kaolin, mica, etc. form in the end product an obstacle preventing air from passing through the product and so improving its impermeability. In this connection, it is important to note that any anisotropy of the filler may emphasize the impermeability characteristics of the rubber.
This solution, however, while improving the impermeability of the innerliner, may result in impairment of its physical characteristics, such as crack resistance, particularly at low temperature, and crack propagation resistance.
The Applicant has devised an alternative solution capable of improving the oxygen impermeability properties of innerliners without compromising the above physical characteristics. As such, for a given degree of impermeability, innerliners may be made thinner, with all the manufacturing advantages referred to above.
According to the present invention, there is provided a tyre innerliner compound comprising a polymer base composed at least partly of butyl rubber and/or halobutyl rubber; a filler system; and a curing system; said compound being characterized in that said filler system comprises 60 to 80 phr of a silicon-based lamellar mineral filler; and 8 to 30 phr of a carbon black mixture comprising a first carbon black with a nitrogen-absorption-measured surface area (N2SA) of 21 to 39 m2/g, and a second carbon black with a nitrogen-absorption-measured surface area (N2SA) of 70 to 120 m2/g.
The surface area ranges were measured by nitrogen absorption as per ASTM Standard D6556.
Preferably, the compound comprises 5 to 25 phr of each of said first and second carbon black.
Preferably, the quantity ratio of said first and second carbon black ranges between 1 and 4, and more preferably between 1 and 2.
According to the present invention, there are also provided an innerliner made from the compound as defined above, and a tyre comprising such an innerliner.
The following are purely non-limiting examples for a clearer understanding of the present invention.
Six control compounds (A-F) and two compounds according to the present invention (G, H) were produced.
As shown below, the control compounds serve to demonstrate how the mixture of two carbon blacks as claimed is what determines the advantages of the compounds according to the invention. More specifically, compound A is a commonly used innerliner compound; compounds B and C differ from the present invention by comprising a different carbon black mixture; compounds D and E differ from the present invention by comprising only one carbon black; and compound F differs from the present invention by comprising a different amount of clay.
Table I shows the compositions in phr of the above control compounds.
0.8
The halobutyl rubber is a bromobutyl rubber.
The kaolin used is marketed by CAMIN under the trade name POLYFIL DL.
Carbon black N660 has a surface area of 34 m2/g.
Carbon black N330 has a surface area of 78.6 m2/g.
Carbon black N134 has a surface area of 131 m2/g.
Table II shows the compositions in phr of the compounds according to the present invention, which differ from each other as to the amount of clay used.
From each of the compounds in Tables I and II, cured-rubber specimens were made, the characteristics of which correspond to those of the innerliner obtainable from the compound.
The specimens were tested for oxygen impermeability, low-temperature crack formation resistance, and crack propagation resistance.
Oxygen impermeability testing was performed on 0.7 mm thick specimens, using a conventional apparatus, such as a MOCON® OX-TRA® (model 2/61). And the measurements were taken at a temperature of 25° C.
Low-temperature crack formation resistance testing was performed as per ETM Standard 135 at a temperature of −40° C.
Crack propagation resistance testing was performed as per ETM Standard 119 at a temperature of 25° C.
Tables III and IV show the results of the above tests, indexed to those of compound A. For a clearer understanding of the results in Tables III and IV, the lower the value indicated, the better the respective characteristic is.
Comparison of the results in Tables III and IV clearly shows how only the compounds according to the invention succeed in achieving a high degree of impermeability without compromising physical characteristics relating to crack formation and propagation resistance.
It is important to note how combining clay with a carbon black mixture other than the one claimed, or with only one of the carbon blacks in the mixture claimed, fails to achieve the advantages sought. In fact, whenever a control compound shows an improvement in impermeability, it also shows a deterioration in crack formation and propagation resistance, and vice versa.
Moreover, as shown by control compound F, to achieve the advantages sought, simply combining clay with the carbon black mixture claimed is not enough, without also employing the quantities defined in the object of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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RM2013A000074 | Feb 2013 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2014/058923 | 2/11/2014 | WO | 00 |