In-House Lab Capabilities: From Rheometers to Tensile Testing Machines.

a factory with a lot of steel being made

In-House Lab Capabilities: From Rheometers to Tensile Testing Machines

Problem Statement

Rubber components in EV battery cooling systems require precise material characterization. Off-the-shelf compounds often fail due to inconsistent cure kinetics or poor compression set resistance under thermal cycling (150°C to -40°C).

Material Science Analysis

Standard EPDM grades degrade in glycol-based coolants due to insufficient crosslink density. RubberQ’s in-house compounded HNBR (36% acrylonitrile content) resists swelling (<5% volume change) via optimized peroxide curing systems. The lab verifies this through:

  • MDR rheometry (ASTM D5289) to track scorch time (ts2) and cure rate
  • FTIR spectroscopy to confirm fluorine content in FKM batches
  • DSC analysis for Tg and thermal stability thresholds

Technical Specs

  • Shore A Hardness: 70±5 (ISO 7619-1)
  • Tensile Strength: ≥18 MPa (ASTM D412)
  • Elongation at Break: 250-300%
  • Temperature Range: -50°C to +175°C continuous
  • Compression Set (22h @ 150°C): ≤15% (ASTM D395 Method B)
Parameter HNBR (RubberQ Custom) Standard EPDM Generic FKM
Glycol Resistance (70°C x 168h) ΔV +3.2% ΔV +22% ΔV +8.5%
Tear Strength (kN/m) 45 28 38
Compression Set @ 175°C 18% 45% 25%
Cost Index 1.8x 1.0x 2.5x

Standard Compliance

RubberQ’s IATF 16949-certified lab enforces:

  • Daily torque rheometer calibration per ISO 9001
  • ASTM D2000 material lot traceability
  • ISO 3601-1 leak testing for seal validation

For custom material compound development or IATF 16949 documentation, consult RubberQ’s engineering department.

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