October 19, 2015
Ancient Use: Evidence suggests rubber use dates back over 2,000,000 years.
Vulcanization Discovery (1839): Charles Goodyear accidentally discovers vulcanization, a process of strengthening rubber, by dropping sulfur-treated rubber onto a hot stove.
Synthetic Rubber Invention (1879): Bouchardat invents synthetic rubber.
Pneumatic Tire (1882): John Boyd Dunlop creates the air-filled rubber tire, spurring increased rubber demand due to the rise of gasoline-powered cars.
Vulcanization Advancements (1883): George Oenslager develops a faster vulcanization method using organic accelerators.
Increased Demand (1890s): The expansion of motor vehicles, particularly tires, leads to a surge in rubber demand.
Polymerization of Methyl Isoprene (1909): Fritz Hofmann and his team succeed in polymerizing methyl isoprene.
First Synthetic Rubber Polymer (1910): Sergei Vasiljevich Lebedev synthesizes the first rubber polymer from butadiene.
Early Research by Ivan Ostromislensky (Early 20th Century): Significant research on synthetic rubber and monomers.
Stevenson Act and Synthetic Rubber Search (1921): The Stevenson Act forms a rubber price-regulating cartel, leading to alternative synthetic rubber exploration.
Rise in Synthetic Rubber Research (1925): High natural rubber prices push companies to explore synthetic rubber production.
Neoprene Development (1931): DuPont, under E.K. Bolton, develops the first successful synthetic rubber, neoprene.
First European Rubber Plant (1932): SK-1, the first rubber plant in Europe, established in Russia by Sergei Lebedev.
Buna Rubbers (1935): German chemists create Buna rubbers, the first series of synthetic rubbers as copolymers.
Sovprene Creation (1940): Russian researchers develop Sovprene, a type of synthetic rubber.
Ameripol (1940): B.F. Goodrich scientist Waldo Semon develops Ameripol, making synthetic rubber production more cost-effective.
GRS Production During WWII (By 1944): 50 factories in the US manufacture GRS (Government Rubber Styrene), exceeding pre-war natural rubber production.
Synthetic Rubber Boom (1941-1945): US synthetic rubber production skyrockets from 8,000 tons to 820,000 tons.
Post-War Developments (Early 1960s): Post-WWII, advancements continue in synthetic rubber production, with the chemical synthesis of isoprene reducing the need for natural rubber.
http://www.explainthatstuff.com/rubber.html
http://www.rma.org/about-rma/rubber-faqs/
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“Reuse, Recycle, and Reduce” are three main aims when it comes to preserving the health of our planet. Rubber mulch definitely falls within their scope. Conserving resources, energy efficiency, and better health for kids are all rubber mulch benefits.
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