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rubber

Any solid substance that upon vulcanization becomes elastic; the term includes natural rubber (caoutchouc) and synthetic rubber. The term elastomer is sometimes used to designate synthetic rubber only and is sometimes extended to include caoutchouc as well.

Chemistry and Properties

All rubberlike materials are polymers, which are high molecular weight compounds consisting of long chains of one or more types of molecules, such as monomers. Vulcanization (or curing) produces chemical links between the loosely coiled polymeric chains; elasticity occurs because the chains can be stretched and the crosslinks cause them to spring back when the stress is released. Natural rubber is a polyterpene, i.e., it consists of isoprene molecules linked into loosely twisted chains. The monomer units along the backbone of the carbon chains are in a cis arrangement (see isomer) and it is this spatial configuration that gives rubber its highly elastic character. In gutta-percha, which is another natural polyterpene, the isoprene molecules are bonded in a trans configuration leading to a crystalline solid at room temperature. Unvulcanized rubber is soluble in a number of hydrocarbons, including benzene, toluene, gasoline, and lubricating oils.

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Columbia University Press The Columbia Encyclopedia, © Columbia University Press 2008


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The Michelin rubber factory in Clermont-Ferrand,...Map of Brazil. (MAPS.com/Corbis)
Map of Guiana. Guiana’s history has been marked...Unloading flour from ships, Miragoâne, Haiti,...

REFERENCES

  • Babcock, Glenn D.History of the United States Rubber Company. Bloomington: Bureau of Business Research, Indiana University, 1966.
  • Blackford, Mansel G.; K. Austin KerrB. F. Goodrich: Tradition and Transformation, 1870-1995. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1996.
  • French, M. J.The U.S. Tire Industry: A History. Boston: Twayne, 1990.

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