Kinetics of Hydroxyl Growth on Natural Rubber Depolymerization with H2O2/Fenton Using Infrared Spectroscopy

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Abstract

The kinetics of the depolymerization of natural rubber (NR) to hydroxyl-terminated natural rubber (HTNR) by hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the presence of a Fenton catalyst within an acidic milieu and under ultraviolet radiation has been rigorously examined utilizing infrared spectroscopy to determine the alterations in molar mass and the functional characteristics. The kinetic model was analyzed in accordance with the elementary reaction, encompassing the following mechanisms: the interaction between hydroxyl radicals and NR, producing radical NR and hydroxylated NR; the reaction wherein radical NR and hydroxyl radicals yield hydroxylated NR; and the subsequent reaction of hydroxylated NR with hydroxyl radicals producing lower radical NR, hydroxylated terminated NR, radical NR, and hydroxylated NR. The conversion of the NR polymer and the total hydroxyl content were discerned at the absorption bands of the CH2-CH2 and OH groups located at 850 cm−1 and 3400 cm−1, respectively. The absorption peak at 1850 cm−1 attributed to CH3 was employed as the reference group for calibration. The influence of the temperature on the depolymerization process conformed to the Arrhenius equation, characterized by activation energies of 750 K and 1200 K. The impact of the H2O2/Fenton ratio on the depolymerization process follows a power law with power coefficients of 1.97 and 1.82.

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