Defense Electronics: Ruggedized Rubber Keypads for Field Communication Devices.

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Defense Electronics: Ruggedized Rubber Keypads for Field Communication Devices

Problem Statement

Military-grade keypads require simultaneous resistance to hydraulic fluids (MIL-H-5606), sand abrasion, and extreme temperature cycling (-40°C to 125°C). Standard NBR compounds fail due to swelling in hydrocarbon exposure and rapid compression set degradation at high temperatures.

Material Science Analysis

  • Failure Mechanism: NBR’s acrylonitrile content (18-50%) provides limited oil resistance but suffers 70%+ volume swell in jet fuel. Its saturated backbone oxidizes above 100°C.
  • Solution: HNBR (Hydrogenated Nitrile) with 36% acrylonitrile and post-hydrogenation processing. This reduces double bond vulnerability while maintaining 30% better fuel resistance than standard NBR.

Technical Specifications

Parameter HNBR-45 Standard NBR FKM
Shore A Hardness 45 ±3 50 ±5 75 ±2
Tensile Strength (MPa) 18.5 12.0 15.2
Elongation at Break (%) 380 350 210
Temperature Range (°C) -40 to 150 -30 to 100 -20 to 200
Compression Set (22h @ 125°C) 18% 45% 12%
Volume Swell in JP-8 (70h @ 23°C) +8% +72% +3%

Standard Compliance

RubberQ’s IATF 16949-certified production ensures:

  • Batch-to-batch hardness variation ≤ ±2 Shore A
  • ASTM D2000 M3BG 714 A14 B14 C12 EF11 (HNBR material callout)
  • ISO 3601-3 Class A for sealing performance validation
  • ASTM D429 Method B adhesion testing for carbon steel substrates

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

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