We investigated the effect of new fillers on the properties of rubbers for solid tires. Modified by fullerenes and unmodified iron oxide fillers were used as new fillers. Fatigue characteristics were determined by two methods: multiple tension on the UR-500 device in accordance with GOST 261-79; alternating bending with rotation on the device SZPI in accordance with GOST 10952-75. The main tasks of constructing fatigue curves were to assess the compliance of the results of strength tests (tension at a constant speed to break) with fatigue in terms of fatigue life, fatigue strength, and fatigue energy density of fracture. In addition, the task was to verify the possibility of plotting on one Weller curve points obtained on different devices - UR 500 and ZPI. The ranking of rubbers in static does not coincide with each other. Since the fatigue loading conditions are closer to the actual operating conditions than the static ones, in order to predict the behavior of rubber goods in operation, one should focus on the results of fatigue tests. Combining the results of fatigue tests with repeated tension and with alternating bending with rotation showed that this procedure is valid, but only in cases where the temperature of self-heating on the ZPI device does not exceed a certain critical value when thermal decomposition begins. The results of fatigue tests showed that the use of the studied fillers with small degrees of filling (up to 30 mass parts) can be justified. An example is Ferrocolor fraction 0–20 ?m with a mass fraction of 5 m.h. In this case, the fatigue properties practically do not deteriorate in comparison with industrial rubber for solid tires, in which new fillers are not added.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.