Title of Invention

CARBON BLACK, METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION THEREOF

Abstract The invention relates to black having a CTAB surface area of 100 to 160 m2/g, a quartile ratio of more than 1.60, and an FP index of >0. Said black is produced in a furnace reactor. Sixty to 90 percent by weight of the raw black material are injected into the reactor in the first third of the reaction zone, while the remaining amount of the raw black material is injected into the reactor upstream at least in one other point. In addition, the combustible is conducted such that 90 to 100 percent by weight of the combustible are evaporated when first hitting the raw black material and 80 to 99 percent by weight of the combustible are evaporated 5ms before hitting the raw black material. Said blacks can be used in rubber mixtures.
Full Text Carbon black, method for the production thereof, and use
thereof
The invention relates to a carbon black, to a process for
production of the same, and also to the use of the same.
Carbon blacks are conventionally used as pigments or
reinforcing fillers or other fillers, and for a wide
variety of other applications. By way of example, carbon
blacks are used as reinforcing fillers in rubber mixtures
which can be used as a starting material for tire treads.
It is well known that the specific surface area of carbon
black has considerable effect on the reinforcing behavior
of carbon black in rubber mixtures. The higher the specific
surface area here, the better the reinforcing behavior and
in particular the abrasion behavior of tire treads
[G. Kraus, Angewandte Makromolekulare Chemie [Applied
Macromolecular Chemistry], Volume 60/61 (1977), page 215] .
However, high specific surface area has the disadvantage
that the rubber mixture has high hysteresis, a consequence
of which is that the tire treads have increased rolling
resistance [W.M. Hess et al., Rubber Chemistry and
Technology, Volume 56, page 390]. Higher rolling resistance
of tire treads causes higher fuel consumption and thus high
energy consumption and/or carbon dioxide emission. This is
undesirable, for economic and environmental reasons.
It is therefore desirable, for environmental and economic
reasons, to achieve a further decrease in hysteresis of
rubber mixtures and thus the rolling resistance of tire
treads, for a given specific surface area. It is known that
this can be achieved, for a given specific surface area, by
broadening the aggregate-size distribution [W.M. Hess et
al.,Rubber Chemistry and Technology, Volume 56, page 390].
However, when the aggregate-size distribution is broadened
there is a simultaneous reduction in the tint strength of
the carbon black [C.J. Stacy et al., Rubber Chemistry and
Technology, Volume 48, page 538]. It is moreover known
that, in particular when high stress levels are involved, a
broadened aggregate-size distribution of carbon black
impairs the abrasion behavior of rubber mixtures and
therefore impairs the abrasion behavior of tire treads
[W.M. Hess et al., Rubber Chemistry and Technology, Volume
56, page 390]. Broadening of aggregate-size distribution is
therefore advantageous for rolling resistance, but is
generally associated with poorer abrasion behavior.
US 2005/0256249 discloses a carbon material with AD50/M
greater than 0.9 and with heterogeneity index greater than
2.3.
EP 0754735 discloses furnace blacks which, when compared
with carbon blacks having identical CTAB surface area,
feature lower rolling resistance together with identical or
better wet-skid performance, when incorporated into SSBR/BR
rubber mixtures. They can be produced in conventional
carbon-black reactors, by conducting the combustion process
in the combustion chamber in such a way that carbon-black
nuclei form and are immediately brought into contact with
the feedstock used for the carbon black.
A disadvantage of the carbon blacks disclosed in EP 0754735
is that abrasion resistance is too low, while rolling
resistance is simultaneously low (loss factor tan 8) in
rubber mixtures.
EP 0949303 discloses carbon blacks which, when compared
with the carbon blacks of EP 0754735, have an aggregate-
size distribution with smaller proportions of large-
diameter aggregates. This leads to improved abrasion
behavior in rubber mixtures. The carbon-black reactors are
run in such a way that carbon-black nuclei form and are
immediately brought into contact with the feedstock used
for the carbon black, with a suitable increase in the
supply of combustion air and the feedstock used for the
carbon black.
A disadvantage of the carbon blacks disclosed in EP 0949303
is the reduction in tint strength and a non-ideal balance
between abrasion resistance and rolling resistance,
although abrasion resistance is better than that of the
carbon blacks of EP 0754735, while rolling resistance is
simultaneously low (loss factor tan 8) .
EP 1783178 discloses a furnace-black process in which a
feedstock used for the carbon black is introduced in a
first stage and is combined with a stream of hot gases, in
order to form a precursor, consisting essentially of a
carbon black in a reaction stream, and further amounts of
the feedstock material used for the carbon black are then
introduced to said precursor, with the aim of thus
partially quenching the reaction stream and subsequently
completely quenching the entire reaction stream. The stream
of hot gases in EP 1783178 can be produced in the form of
combustion gas from the reaction of a fuel with an oxidant,
such as air, and the ratio of air to fuel here can vary
from 1:1 (stoichiometric) up to an infinite ratio. The fuel
can be a solid, liquid, or gaseous fuel.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a
carbon black which, in rubber mixtures, provides a good
balance of high abrasion resistance (= low abrasion) with
low rolling resistance.
The invention provides a carbon black, characterized in
that the CTAB surface area is from 100 to 160 m2/g,
preferably from 100 to 149 m2/g, particularly preferably
from 100 to 144 m2/g, very particularly preferably from 105
to 140 m2/g, the quartile ratio is greater than 1.60,
preferably from 1.65 to 2.30, particularly preferably from
1.7 0 to 2.30, very particularly preferably from 1.75 to
2.30, with particular preference from 1.80 to 2.30,
extremely preferably from 1.85 to 2.25, and the FP index is
> 0, preferably > 0.5, particularly preferably > 1.0, very
particularly preferably > 1.5.
The FP index is calculated from the following equation:
FP index = tint strength - (65 + (1.057 g/m2) * CTAB -
(0.002745 g2/m4) * CTAB * CTAB - (25.96 g/cm3) * COAN -
(0.201 g/m2) * (NSA - CTAB)) + 6.57502 - 847817 *
EXP(- 6.94397 * (quartile ratio)).
The CTAB value is measured to ASTM D3765-04.
The NSA value is measured to ASTM D6556-04, using the
following parameters: relative pressures: section 10.4.4.
The COAN value is measured to ASTM D3493-06, using the
following parameters: Oil: paraffin; method for end-point
determination: procedure A.
The tint strength is measured to ASTM D3265-06, using the
following parameters: Hoover Muller paste preparation,
Erichsen tint tester - film drawdown method.
The quartile ratio is calculated from the aggregate-size
distribution.
The aggregate-size distribution here is determined to the
ISO 15825 standard, first edition, 2004-11-01, with the
following modifications:
Supplement to section 4.6.3 of the ISO 15825 standard: The
mode relates to the curve of distribution by mass (mass
distribution curve).
Supplement to section 5.1 of the ISO 15825 standard: The
equipment used comprises a BI-DCP Particle Sizer with
associated dcplw32 evaluation software, Version 3.81, all
of which is obtainable from Brookhaven Instruments
Corporation, 750 Blue Point Rd., Holtsville, NY, 11742.
Supplement to section 5.2 of the ISO 15825 standard: The
equipment used comprises a GM22 00 ultrasound control unit,
a UW2200 acoustic transducer, and a DH13G sonotrode. The
ulstrasound control unit, acoustic transducer, and
sonotrode are obtainable from Bandelin electronic GmbH &
Co. KG, Heinrichstrasse 3-4, D-12207 Berlin. The values set
here on the ultrasound control unit are as follows: Power
% = 50, Cycle = 8. This corresponds to a nominal power
level set at 100 watts and to pulse levels set at 80%.
Supplement to section 5.2.1 of the ISO 15825 standard:
Ultrasound time is set at 4.5 minutes.
The definition given in section 6.3 of the ISO 15825
standard is varied by defining "surfactant" as follows:
"surfactant" is Nonidet P 40 Substitute, which is an
anionic surfactant from Fluka, obtainable from Sigma-
Aldrich Chemie GmbH, Industriestrasse 25, CH-9471 Buchs SG,
Switzerland.
The definition of spin fluid given in section 6.5 of the
ISO 15825 standard is varied by defining spin fluid as
follows: The spin fluid is produced by taking 0.25 g of
Nonidet P 40 Substitute surfactant from Fluka (section 6.3)
and making this up to 1000 ml with demineralized water
(section 6.1). The pH of the solution is then adjusted to
from 9 to 10 by using 0.1 mol/1 NaOH solution. The spin
fluid has to be used at most 1 week after it has been
produced.
The definition of dispersion fluid given in section 6.6 of
the ISO 15825 standard is varied by defining dispersion
fluid as follows: The dispersion fluid is produced by
taking 2 00 ml of ethanol (section 6.2) and 0.5 g of Nonidet
P 40 Substitute surfactant from Fluka (section 6.3) and
making this up to 1000 ml with demineralized water (section
6.1). The pH of the solution is then adjusted to from 9 to
10 by using 0.1 mol/1 NaOH solution. The dispersion fluid
has to be used at most 1 week after it has been produced.
Supplement to section 7 of the ISO 15825 standard: The
material used is exclusively pelletized carbon black.
The instructions in sections 8.1, 8.2, and 8.3 of the
ISO 15825 standard are together replaced by the following
instruction: The pelletized carbon black is gently crushed
in an agate mortar. 20 ml of dispersion solution (section
6.6) are then admixed with 20 mg of carbon black in a 3 0 ml
beaded-rim bottle (diameter 28 mm, height 75 mm, wall
thickness 1.0 mm) and treated with ultrasound (section 5.2)
in a cooling bath (16°C +/- 1°C) for a period of 4.5
minutes (section 5.2.1) so that the carbon black becomes
suspended in the dispersion solution. After the ultrasound
treatment, the specimen is measured in the centrifuge
within a period of 5 minutes.
Supplement to section 9 of the ISO 15825 standard: The
carbon black density value to be entered is 1.86 g/cm3. The
temperature for the temperature to be entered is determined
in accordance with section 10.11. The option "aqueous" is
selected for spin-fluid type. This gives a value of 0.997
(g/cc) for spin-fluid density and a value of 0.917 (cP) for
spin-fluid viscosity. The light-scattering correction is
applied by using options selectable in the dcplw 32
software: file = carbon.prm; Mie correction.
Supplement to section 10.1 of the ISO 15825 standard:
Centrifuge speed is set to 11 000 r/min.
Supplement to section 10.2 of the ISO 15825 standard:
0.85 cm3 of ethanol (section 6.2) is injected instead of
0.2 cm3 of ethanol (section 6.2).
Supplement to section 10.3 of the ISO 15825 standard:
Exactly 15 cm3 of spin fluid (section 6.5) are injected.
0.15 cm3 of ethanol (section 6.2) is then injected.
The instruction in section 10.4 of the ISO 15825 standard
is omitted completely.
Supplement to section 10.7 of the ISO 15825 standard:
Immediately after the start of data recording, the spin
fluid in the centrifuge is covered with 0.1 cm3 of dodecane
(section 6.4).
Supplement to section 10.10 of the ISO 15825 standard: If
the measurement curve does not return to the base line
within a period of one hour, the measurement is terminated
after precisely 1 hour of measurement time, rather than
restarting with a different centrifuge-rotation rate.
Supplement to section 10.11 of the ISO 15825 standard:
Instead of using the method described in the instructions
for determining the measurement temperature, the
measurement temperature T to be entered into the computer
program is determined as follows:
T = 2/3 (Te - Ta) + Ta,
where Ta is the temperature of the measurement chamber
prior to measurement and Te is the temperature of the
measurement chamber after measurement. The temperature
difference should not exceed 4°C.
The fraction of the particles > 150 nm in the aggregate-
size distribution can be smaller than 20% by weight,
preferably smaller than 14% by weight, particularly
preferably smaller than 10% by weight.
The fraction > 150 nm is the proportion by weight of the
aggregates having a Stokes diameter greater than 150 nm,
and is likewise obtained from the aggregate-size
distribution in accordance with the ISO 15825 standard
described above.
The ratio calculated from the AD-50 value and the mode can
be greater than 1.0, preferably greater than 1.05, very
particularly preferably greater than or equal to 1.10.
The AD-50 value and the mode are likewise obtained form the
aggregate-size distribution in accordance with the
ISO 15825 standard described above.
Tint strength can be greater than 110, preferably greater
than 114, particularly greater than 117, very particularly
greater than 120.
The COAN value can be from 90 to 130 cm3/100 g.
The carbon black can be a gas black, channel black, lamp
black, or furnace black.
The carbon black of the invention can be a carbon black
which has not undergone surface modification and which has
not undergone post-treatment.
The pH of the carbon black of the invention can be > 5.
The invention further provides a process for producing the
carbon black of the invention in a furnace-black reactor
which comprises, along the reactor axis, a combustion zone,
a reaction zone, and a termination zone, via production of
a stream of hot exhaust gas in the combustion zone via
combustion of a fuel in an oxygen-containing gas and
passage of the exhaust gas from the combustion zone via the
reaction zone into the termination zone, mixing to
incorporate a feedstock used for the carbon black into the
hot exhaust gas in the reaction zone, and termination of
carbon-black formation in the termination zone via
introduction of water spray, characterized in that from 60
to 90% by weight, preferably from 75 to 85% by weight, of
the feedstock used for the carbon black are introduced
through a nozzle within the first third of the reaction
zone, and the remaining amount of the feedstock used for
the carbon black is introduced through a nozzle upstream at
at least one further point into the reactor, and the fuel
is conducted in such a way that on first encounter with the
feedstock used for the carbon black from 90 to 100% by
weight, preferably from 99 to 100% by weight, of the fuel
has vaporized, and 5 ms prior to encountering the feedstock
used for the carbon black from 80 to 99% by weight,
preferably from 90 to 99% by weight, particularly
preferably from 92 to 98% by weight, of the fuel has
vaporized.
The fuel atomizer used can comprise either atomizers
operating purely by using pressure (one-fluid atomizer) or
else two-fluid atomizers using internal or external mixing.
The fuel can be conducted in accordance with the invention
either by using atomizers operating purely by using
pressure (one-fluid atomizers) or else by using two-fluid
atomizers with internal or external mixing, by selecting
the conditions in such a way as to balance the following
factors: the droplet size achieved during the atomization
process, the residence time of these droplets prior to
encountering the feedstock used for the carbon black, and
the reaction temperatures. In particular, use of two-fluid
atomizers and of liquid fuel permits control of droplet
size within a wide range independently of throughput, and
thus allows this to be balanced with the residence time of
the fuel prior to encountering the feedstock used for the
carbon black, and with the reaction temperatures.
Droplet-size distribution can be determined with the aid of
optical methods. Various commercial nozzle manufacturers
supply these measurements as a service, an example being
Diisen-Schlick GmbH, Hutstrasse 4, D-96253
Untersiemau/Coburg, Germany (www.duesen-schlick.de). The
residence time of the droplets, and the reaction
temperatures within the process, can be determined on the
basis of computer-aided rheological simulation
calculations. By way of example, "Fluent", Version 6.3,
from Fluent (Fluent Deutschland GmbH, Birkenweg 14a, 64295
Darmstadt) is commercial software which can simulate the
furnace reactor used and, after input of all of the ingoing
process streams, inclusive of the measured droplet-size
distribution, can use its underlying chemical model to
calculate the residence times and the vaporization rates of
the fuel droplets, and the reaction temperatures.
The fuel can be a liquid fuel or a fuel which is to some
extent liquid and to some extent gaseous.
The feedstocks used for the carbon black can be introduced
through nozzles by means of radial lances. The number of
radial lances used can be from 2-32, preferably from 4-16,
particularly preferably from 4-8.
The feedstock used for the carbon black can be a liquid or
gaseous feedstock or a feedstock which is to some extent
liquid and to some extent gaseous.
The liquid feedstock used for the carbon black can be
atomized by pressure, by steam, by compressed air, or by
the gaseous feedstock.
Liquid feedstocks that can be used for the carbon black are
liquid aliphatic or aromatic, saturated or unsaturated
hydrocarbons, or a mixture thereof, or coal-tar
distillates, or residual oils produced during the catalytic
cracking of petroleum fractions or during olefin production
via cracking of naphtha, or of gas oil.
The gaseous feedstock used for the carbon black can be
gaseous aliphatic, saturated or unsaturated hydrocarbons, a
mixture thereof, or natural gas.
The "K factor" is often used as a variable to characterize
the excess of air. The K factor is the ratio between the
amount of air needed for stoichiometric combustion of the
fuel and the actual amount of air introduced into the
combustion process. A K factor of 1 therefore means
stoichiometric combustion. If there is an excess of air,
the K factor is smaller than 1. K factors that can be used
here are from 0.2 to 0.9, as is the case with known carbon
blacks. Preferred K factors used are from 0.6 to 0.8.
The process described is not restricted to any particular
reactor geometry, but rather can be adapted to various
reactor types and reactor sizes.
The atomizers for the feedstock for the carbon black can be
either atomizers operating purely by using pressure (one-
fluid atomizers) or else two-fluid atomizers with internal
or external mixing, and the atomizing medium used can be
the gaseous feedstock used for the carbon black.
Two-fluid atomizers can be used for atomizing liquid
feedstock used for the carbon black. In the case of one-
fluid atomizers, a change in throughput can also lead to a
change in droplet size, but in the case of two-fluid
atomizers the droplet size can be controlled substantially
independently of throughput.
If the feedstock used for the carbon black simultaneously
comprises oil and gaseous hydrocarbons, e.g. methane, the
gaseous hydrocarbons can be injected separately from the
oil by way of a dedicated set of gas lances into the stream
of hot exhaust gas.
The carbon blacks of the invention can be used as
reinforcing filler or other filler, UV stabilizer,
conductive carbon black, or pigment. The carbon blacks of
the invention can be used in rubber, plastic, printing
inks, inkjet inks, other inks, toners, lacquers, paints,
and in paper, and in bitumen, concrete, and other
construction materials. The carbon blacks of the invention
can be used as reducing agents for metallurgical purposes.
The carbon blacks of the invention can be used as
reinforcing carbon black in rubber mixtures.
The invention further provides rubber mixtures
characterized in that they comprise at least one rubber,
preferably at least one diene rubber, particularly
preferably at least natural rubber, and at least one carbon
black of the invention.
The amounts that can be used of the carbon black of the
invention are from 10 to 150 phr (parts per hundred
rubber), preferably from 2 0 to 100 phr, particularly
preferably from 30 to 90 phr, very particularly preferably
from 3 0 to 80 phr, based on the amount of the rubber used.
The rubber mixture of the invention can be comprise silica,
preferably precipitated silica. The rubber mixture of the
invention can comprise organosilanes, such as
bis(triethoxysilylpropyl) polysulfide or (mercaptoorganyl)-
alkoxysilanes.
The rubber mixture of the invention can comprise rubber
auxiliaries.
Materials suitable for production of the rubber mixtures of
the invention are not only natural rubber but also
synthetic rubbers. Preferred synthetic rubbers are
described by way of example in W. Hofmann,
Kautschuktechnologie [Rubber technology], Genter Verlag,
Stuttgart 1980. They encompass inter alia
- polybutadiene (BR),
- polyisoprene (IR),
- styrene/butadiene copolymers, such as emulsion SBR
(ESBR) or solution SBR (SSBR), preferably having
styrene content of from 1 to 60% by weight,
particularly preferably from 2 to 50% by weight, based
on the entirety of the polymer,
- chloroprene (CR),
- isobutylene/isoprene copolymers (IIR),
- butadiene/acrylonitrile copolymers, preferably having
acrylonitrile content of from 5 to 60% by weight,
preferably from 10 to 50% by weight, based on the
entirety of the polymer (NBR),
- partially or fully hydrogenated NBR rubber (HNBR),
- ethylene/propylene/diene copolymers (EPDM)
- ethylene/propylene copolymers (EPM) or
- abovementioned rubbers additionally having functional
groups, such as carboxy, silanol, or epoxy groups,
examples being epoxidized NR, carboxy-functionalized
NBR, or silanol- (-SiOH) or siloxy-functionalized
(-Si-OR) SBR,
and also mixtures of these rubbers.
Production of truck-tire treads can in particular use
natural rubber, or else a mixture thereof with diene
rubbers.
Production of car-tire treads can in particular use SBR, or
else a mixture thereof with other diene rubbers.
The rubber mixtures of the invention can comprise further
rubber auxiliaries, such as reaction accelerators,
antioxidants, heat stabilizers, light stabilizers,
antiozonants, processing aids, plasticizers, tackifiers,
blowing agents, dyes, pigments, waxes, extenders, organic
acids, retarders, metal oxides, and also activators, such
as diphenylguanidine, triethanolamine, polyethylene glycol,
alkoxy-terminated polyethylene glycol, or hexanetriol,
these being known in the rubber industry.
The amounts used of the rubber auxiliaries can be
conventional, depending inter alia on the intended use.
Examples of conventional amounts can be amounts of from 0.1
to 5 0 phr, based on rubber.
Crosslinking agents that can be used are sulfur, organic
sulfur donors, or free radical generators. The rubber
mixtures of the invention can moreover comprise
vulcanization accelerators.
Examples of suitable vulcanization accelerators can be
mercaptobenzthiazoles, sulfenamides, guanidines, thiurams,
dithiocarbamates, thioureas and thiocarbonates.
The amounts that can be used of the vulcanization
accelerators and crosslinking agents are from 0.1 to
10 phr, preferably from 0.1 to 5 phr, based on rubber.
The blending of the rubbers with the filler, and if
appropriate with rubber auxiliaries, and if appropriate
with the organosilanes, can be conducted in or on
conventional mixing assemblies, such as rolls, internal
mixers, and mixing extruders. Rubber mixtures of this type
can usually be produced in an internal mixer, beginning
with one or more successive thermomechanical mixing stages
in which the following are incorporated: the rubbers, the
carbon black of the invention, if appropriate the silica,
and if appropriate the organosilanes, and the rubber
auxiliaries, at from 100 to 170°C. The sequence of addition
and the juncture of addition of the individual components
can have a decisive effect here on the properties obtained
from the mixture. The crosslinking chemicals can then
usually be admixed with the resultant rubber mixture in an
internal mixer or on a roll system at from 40 to 130°C,
preferably from 50 to 120°C, the mixture then being
processed to give what is known as the crude mixture for
the process steps that follow, examples being shaping and
vulcanization.
The vulcanization of the rubber mixtures of the invention
can take place at temperatures of 80 to 200°C, preferably
from 130 to 180°C, if appropriate under pressure of from 10
to 200 bar.
The rubber mixtures of the invention are suitable for
production of moldings, e.g. for the production of
pneumatic or other tires, tire treads, cable sheathing,
hoses, drive belts, conveyor belts, roll coverings, shoe
soles, sealing rings, profiles, and damping elements.
An advantage of the carbon black of the invention is good
abrasion resistance together with good rolling resistance
in rubber mixtures.
Examples
Example 1 (production of carbon black):
A series of carbon blacks of the invention are produced in
the carbon-black reactor shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1 shows a longitudinal section through the furnace
reactor. The carbon-black reactor has a combustion chamber
5, in which the hot process gas for the pyrolysis of the
carbon black oil is produced via combustion of fuel with
introduction of an excess of atmospheric oxygen. The
inventive carbon black is produced by using carbon black
oil as fuel. The comparative carbon black is produced by
using natural gas as fuel.
The combustion air is introduced by way of a plurality of
apertures 2, distributed concentrically around the circular
end wall of the combustion chamber. The fuel is introduced
by way of the axial burner lance 1 into the combustion
chamber. The burner lance can be displaced axially in order
to optimize conduct of the process in the invention. The
combustion chamber narrows conically in the direction of
the narrowest section 6. The feedstock used for the carbon
black is introduced through nozzles by way of radial lances
3 at or prior to the narrowest section. Once the narrowest
section has been passed, the reaction-gas mixture expands
into the reaction chamber 7.
A, B, and C indicate various positions for the injection of
the carbon black oil into the hot process gas by means of
the oil lances 3. At the head of the oil lances there are
suitable spray nozzles. At each injection position there
are at least four injectors distributed across the
periphery of the reactor.
In the termination zone, water spray is introduced via the
quench-water lance 4.
Combustion zone, reaction zone, and termination zone are
characterized in Figure 1 by the Roman numerals I to III.
The exact axial dimensioning of these depends on the
respective positioning of the burner lance, of the oil
lances, and of the quench-water lance.
The dimensions of the reactor used can be found in the
following list:

measured from the entry to the narrowest section
(+: after entry -: prior to entry)
To produce the carbon blacks of the invention, a carbon
black oil having 92% by weight carbon content and 6% by
weight hydrogen content is used as fuel and feedstock. To
produce the comparative carbon black, natural gas is used
as fuel and a carbon black oil having 92% by weight carbon
content and 6% by weight hydrogen content is used as
feedstock.
The reactor parameters for production of the carbon blacks
of the invention are listed in Table 1. 5 different carbon
blacks are produced (carbon blacks 1 to 4 of the invention
and comparative carbon black 5). The production conditions
differ in particular in relation to the amount of the
feedstock injected at and, respectively, prior to the
narrowest section.
The carbon blacks produced are subjected to the
conventional wet pelletization process prior to
characterization and incorporation into the rubber
mixtures.
Measured from the start of the narrowest section
The proportion of vaporized fuel 5 ms prior to first
encounter with the feedstock, and of vaporized fuel on
encounter with the feedstock, are calculated using version
6.3 of the "Fluent" program, using a computer-aided
rheological simulation calculation.
Table 2 lists the analytical data for the carbon blacks
produced:
Comparative carbon black 1 is Corax® N 121 from Evonik
Degussa GmbH. Comparative carbon black 2 is Ecorax® 172 0
from Evonik Degussa GmbH. Comparative carbon black 2 is
produced by the process described in EP 0949303.
Comparative carbon black 3 is Corax® N 22 0 from Evonik
Degussa GmbH. Comparative carbon black 4 is Corax® N 134
from Evonik Degussa GmbH.
Example 2 (vulcanizate tests in natural rubber):
Table 3 below gives the formulation used for the natural
rubber mixtures. The unit phr here means parts by weight,
based on 100 parts of the crude rubber used.
The general method for the production of rubber mixtures
and vulcanizates thereof is described in the following
book: "Rubber Technology Handbook", W. Hofmann, Hanser
Verlag 1994.
Table 3:

SMR10 natural rubber, ML4 = from 60-70, is SMR10 which is
masticated on a roll mill by the usual methods prior to
the incorporation mixing process, with at least 24 hours,
but at most 1 week, of intermediate storage at room
temperature after the mastication process. The ML 1+4
(100°C) value for this masticated SMR10 is in the range
from 60 to 70. The ML 1+4 value is measured to
DIN 53523/3.
Vulkanox® 402 0 is the antioxidant 6PPD from Lanxess AG.
Vulkanox® HS is the antioxidant TMQ from Lanxess AG.
Protektor® G3108 is an antiozonant wax from Paramelt B.V..
Rhenogran® TBBS-80 is a TBBS-type vulcanization accelerator
from Rhein-Chemie GmbH, comprising 80% of active
ingredient.
The rubber mixtures were produced in an internal mixer in
accordance with the mixing specification in Table 4.
Table 6 shows the results of vulcanizate testing. The
vulcanization time for the mixtures is 17 minutes.
The higher the DIN abrasion (mm3) value, the poorer the
abrasion resistance of the rubber mixture. The abrasion-
resistance index is therefore calculated for each carbon
black within the respective carbon black group, as follows:
Abrasion-resistance index = (DIN abrasion of reference
carbon black within the group / DIN abrasion) * 100.
The reference carbon black within group 1 is comparative
carbon black 1, the reference carbon black within group 2
is comparative carbon black 3, the reference carbon black
within group 3 is comparative carbon black 4 and the
reference carbon black within group 4 is comparative carbon
black 5.
An abrasion-resistance index > 100 therefore indicates
improved abrasion resistance, and values impaired abrasion resistance, relative to the respective
reference carbon black within the group.
The higher the needle temperature (°C) value, the higher
the level of heat generation and therefore the higher the
hysteresis on dynamic stress within the rubber mixture, the
expected rolling resistance therefore being poorer. The
rolling-resistance index is therefore calculated as follows
for each carbon black within the respective carbon black
group:
Rolling-resistance index = (needle temperature of reference
carbon black within the group / needle temperature) * 100.
A rolling-resistance index > 100 therefore indicates
improved, i.e. reduced, rolling resistance, and values
respective reference carbon black within the group.
The results in Table 6 show that each of the carbon blacks
of the invention, with FP index > 0, has a better balance
of abrasion resistance and rolling resistance than the
comparative carbon blacks with FP index of a balanced general vulcanizate property profile.
Example 3 (vulcanizate testing in ESBR):
Table 7 below gives the formulation used for the ESBR
mixtures.
Table 7:

Krynol® 1712 ESBR is an ESBR from Lanxess AG, extended with
37.5 phr of oil.
Vulcanization accelerator Vulkacit® CZ/EG-C is CBS from
Lanxess AG. Vulcanization accelerator Perkacit TBZTD-PDR-D
is TBZTD from Flexsys N.V.
The rubber mixtures are produced in an internal mixer in
accordance with the mixing specification in Table 8.
Table 9 shows the results of vulcanizate testing. The I
vulcanization time for the mixtures is 13 minutes. I
The reference carbon black within group 5 is comparative
carbon black 1, the reference carbon black within group 6
is comparative carbon black 3, the reference carbon black
within group 7 is comparative carbon black 4 and the
reference carbon black within group 8 is comparative carbon
black 5.
The results in Table 9 show that each of the carbon blacks
of the invention, with FP index > 0, has a better balance
of abrasion resistance and rolling resistance than the
comparative carbon blacks with FP index of a balanced general vulcanizate property profile.
We claim:
1. A carbon black, characterized in that the CTAB surface
area is from 100 to 160 m2/g, the quartile ratio is
greater than 1.60, and the FP index is > 0.
2. The carbon black as claimed in claim 1, characterized in
that the FP index is > 0.5.
3. The carbon black as claimed in claim 1, characterized in
that the fraction of the particles > 150 nm in the
aggregate-size distribution is smaller than 20% by-
weight .
4. A process for producing the carbon black as claimed in
claim 1 in a furnace-black reactor which comprises,
along the reactor axis, a combustion zone, a reaction
zone, and a termination zone, via production of a stream
of hot exhaust gas in the combustion zone via combustion
of a fuel in an oxygen-containing gas and passage of the
exhaust gas from the combustion zone via the reaction
zone into the termination zone, mixing to incorporate a
feedstock used for the carbon black into the hot exhaust
gas in the reaction zone, and termination of carbon-
black formation in the termination zone via introduction
of water spray, characterized in that from 60 to 90% by
weight of the feedstock used for the carbon black are
introduced through a nozzle within the first third of
the reaction zone, and the remaining amount of the
feedstock used for the carbon black is introduced
through a nozzle upstream at at least one further point
into the reactor, and the fuel is conducted in such a
way that on first encounter with the feedstock used for
the carbon black from 90 to 100% by weight of the fuel
has vaporized, and 5 ms prior to encountering the
feedstock used for the carbon black from 80 to 99% by
weight of the fuel has vaporized.
5. The use of the carbon black as claimed in claim 1 as
reinforcing filler or other filler, UV stabilizer,
conductive carbon black, or pigment.
6. The use of the carbon black as claimed in claim 1 as
reinforcing carbon black in rubber mixtures.
7. A rubber mixture, characterized in that it comprises at
least one rubber and at least one carbon black as
claimed in claim 1.
8. The rubber mixture as claimed in claim 7, characterized
in that the rubber is a diene rubber.
9. The rubber mixture as claimed in claim 8, characterized
in that the diene rubber is a natural rubber.

The invention relates to black having a CTAB surface area of 100 to 160
m2/g, a quartile ratio of more than 1.60, and an FP index of >0. Said black
is produced in a furnace reactor. Sixty to 90 percent by weight of the raw
black material are injected into the reactor in the first third of the reaction
zone, while the remaining amount of the raw black material is injected into
the reactor upstream at least in one other point. In addition, the
combustible is conducted such that 90 to 100 percent by weight of the
combustible are evaporated when first hitting the raw black material and
80 to 99 percent by weight of the combustible are evaporated 5ms before
hitting the raw black material. Said blacks can be used in rubber mixtures.

Documents:

http://ipindiaonline.gov.in/patentsearch/GrantedSearch/viewdoc.aspx?id=qDxNyUgTTQP6k25kP7hdoQ==&loc=wDBSZCsAt7zoiVrqcFJsRw==


Patent Number 279234
Indian Patent Application Number 1573/KOLNP/2010
PG Journal Number 03/2017
Publication Date 20-Jan-2017
Grant Date 16-Jan-2017
Date of Filing 04-May-2010
Name of Patentee EVONIK DEGUSSA GMBH
Applicant Address RELLINGHAUSER STRASSE 1-11, 45128 ESSEN, GERMANY
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 PELSTER, THOMAS HERMANNSTRASSE 18, 50321 BRÜHL, GERMANY
2 FRÖHLICH, JOACHIM OBERER LÄHRER WEG 46 A, 92318 NEUMARKT, GERMANY
3 NIEDERMEIER, WERNER AUF DEM GALLBERG 11A, 50321 BRÜHL, GERMANY
4 VOGLER, CONNY WINTERSCHEIDER STR. 9, 53809 RUPPICHTEROTH, GERMANY
5 FREUND, BURKHARD LÜTTENJÖRN 29, 24536 NEUMÜNSTER, GERMANY
PCT International Classification Number C09C 1/50
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2008/061701
PCT International Filing date 2008-09-04
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10 2007 047 432.8 2007-10-04 Germany