A simple and cost-effective adhesive-based
rubber recycling process
was designed as an alternative to devulcanization. Interfacial bonding
between vulcanized and virgin rubbers is improved by incorporating
adhesives and coating processes during rubber reblending and reducing
interfacial defects that cause premature failure. In flat laminates,
the bond strength between vulcanized and virgin materials doubles
when a vulcanizing fluid and thin adhesive layer are introduced. These
components are combined into single-component adhesives (SCAs), which
improve bond strength sixfold over no treatment, using half the raw
material as the multilayer adhesive. When SCAs are coated onto vulcanized
rubber particles prior to reblending, the best rubbers exhibit nearly
50% increases in mechanical strength and toughness vs the untreated
control and statistically identical extensibility; all treatments
improved mechanical strength. This simple, inexpensive, and scalable
process can be implemented with one step beyond standard reblending
and curing, providing a promising alternative to devulcanization for
polymer recycling