Nitrile rubber (NBR): Identify the correct pair of monomers used to produce this oil-resistant elastomer by copolymerization.

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: acrylonitrile & butadiene

Explanation:

Introduction / Context:Nitrile rubber (NBR) is valued for its resistance to oils, fuels, and many chemicals. It is ubiquitous in seals, O-rings, fuel hoses, gloves, and gasketing. The question assesses knowledge of the monomer composition underlying these performance traits.

Given Data / Assumptions:

  • NBR is a copolymer rather than a homopolymer.
  • Candidate monomers include common vinyl and diene species.
  • Oil resistance correlates with polar nitrile content in the copolymer.

Concept / Approach:NBR results from emulsion or solution copolymerization of acrylonitrile (ACN) with 1,3-butadiene. The ACN content (typically 18–50%) tunes polarity and oil resistance: more ACN improves fuel/oil resistance but reduces low-temperature flexibility. The butadiene segments provide elastomeric behavior and processability.

Step-by-Step Solution:

Identify monomer that introduces nitrile functionality: acrylonitrile.Identify elastomeric diene partner: 1,3-butadiene.Select the pair acrylonitrile & butadiene as the definition of NBR.

Verification / Alternative check:Specifications for NBR (e.g., ASTM designations) list ACN content to classify grades, confirming the monomer set.

Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Acrylonitrile & styrene: Leads to SAN, a rigid copolymer (used in ABS blends) not an oil-resistant elastomer.
  • Isobutylene & isoprene: Forms butyl rubber (IIR), a different elastomer with low gas permeability, not NBR.
  • None of these: Incorrect because option (a) is correct.

Common Pitfalls:Assuming all nitrile-named materials are homopolymers of acrylonitrile; NBR is a copolymer with critical composition balance.

Final Answer:acrylonitrile & butadiene

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