Correlation of Physical Properties with Performance of Polyacrylate Radial Lip Seals at -30F

730051

2/1/1973

Authors
Abstract
Content
This paper evaluates the tendency of lip seals to fracture in a test apparatus in which dynamic runout is 0.010 in and the temperature is cycled between -30 and 0 F. Seals made of eight different polyacrylate polymers were soap-sulfur cured with various types and amounts of carbon black. Physical tests included room-temperature flexibility defined by Young's modulus at small strains, standard tensile tests at room temperature, flexibility at sub-zero temperatures determined by a Gehman test, and sub-zero starting torques of the seals. Primary determinant of successful fracture resistance is a low starting torque resulting from good low-temperature flexibility. The effect of adding graphite to some of these formulations is described and some current commercially available seals are evaluated.
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/730051
Pages
10
Citation
Brown, J., and Drutowski, R., "Correlation of Physical Properties with Performance of Polyacrylate Radial Lip Seals at -30F," SAE Technical Paper 730051, 1973, https://doi.org/10.4271/730051.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
2/1/1973
Product Code
730051
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English