Noise pollution poses significant challenges to human health and quality of life; thus, high-performance damping materials are attracting increasing attention. Rubber has been extensively applied in these materials due to its viscoelasticity. However, the damping performance of these materials is often constrained by the intrinsically limited energy-dissipation capability of the polymer backbone, which lacks sound-absorbing functionalities. Herein, a cross-linked sliding graft copolymer (SGC) was incorporated into isobutylene-isoprene rubber (IIR) and chlorinated butyl rubber (ClIR) to fabricate high-strength damping elastomers. Unlike conventional covalently cross-linked polymers, the cross-linked SGC features mobile junctions, which can slide along the polyrotaxane backbone to redistribute and equalize chain tension, giving rise to the “pulley effect”. Benefiting from the intrinsically high energy-dissipation capability of SGC and the cooperative contribution of interfacial hydrogen bonding, the obtained SGC/IIR and SGC/ClIR blends exhibit both enhanced damping performance and mechanical properties. The synergistic improvement in damping capacity and mechanical robustness renders the SGC/rubber blends as promising candidates for advanced sound-absorption applications.
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Kaijuan Li
ZY Zhang
Wei Cheng
Polymers
Northwestern Polytechnical University
Luoyang Institute of Science and Technology
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Li et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8955f6c1944d70ce064e7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18080900
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