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Analysis of Mold Contamination and Corrosion Mechanisms in the Production of Compression-Molded Rubber Products

Posted on22 December 2025

In the production and processing of compression-molded rubber products, rubber molds are critical tools for controlling and ensuring product geometry, assembly dimensions, and compliance with dimensional tolerances. The design and manufacturing quality of molds directly determines the dimensional accuracy, surface appearance, and final qualification rate of rubber products, and serves as the fundamental basis for achieving high-yield rubber molds.

Rubber products are typically manufactured by mixing raw rubber with various compounding ingredients, followed by processing under high temperature and high pressure conditions. The compound is injected into the mold cavity, where it flows and fills the designed cavity and groove structures. Through crosslinking reactions, the compound is finally transformed into vulcanized rubber products with practical application value.

This process is widely used in rubber mold manufacturing and high-precision silicone rubber mold forming.


1. Mold Materials and Service Environment as Sources of Contamination and Corrosion

At present, most rubber molds are manufactured from P20 medium-carbon steel or 45# steel, which belong to typical hot-work mold steels. Under long-term high-temperature vulcanization conditions, mold cavities are prone to the following types of damage and contamination:

Thermal Oxidation Contamination

When molds are exposed to high temperatures, oxidation reactions occur between the mold surface and oxygen in the air, forming oxidation contamination spots on the cavity surface.

 

Non-polar rubbers: prone to softening degradation and adhesion to the mold cavity surface

Polar rubbers: tend to form localized hardened spots, negatively affecting demolding performance and surface appearance

Deposition of Compounding Agents and Low-Molecular Substances

Certain compounding ingredients or low-molecular components in rubber compounds generate new reaction products during vulcanization, which gradually deposit on the mold cavity surface.

Corrosive Gases and Halogen Effects

Some rubber types, such as chloroprene rubber (CR), chlorosulfonated polyethylene rubber (CSM), and fluororubber (FKM), release corrosive substances such as HCl, H₂S, and metal chlorides during vulcanization. These substances cause significant corrosion of mold cavities, with particularly severe effects on silicone rubber mold processing and precision mold service life.

These contamination and corrosion phenomena not only degrade the appearance and intrinsic performance of vulcanized rubber products, but also reduce production stability, potentially leading to interrupted continuous operation, which directly impacts mass-production performance after rapid rubber mold delivery.


2. Key Factors Affecting Mold Contamination and Corrosion (Weight Analysis)

Based on practical experience and weight factor analysis, mold contamination and corrosion are primarily driven by the rubber compounding system, including:

Vulcanization system additives (sulfur, accelerators, zinc oxide)

Accelerators with low solubility and high migration tendency

Migratory antioxidants

Activators such as stearic acid

External Release and Mold-Release Systems

Polysiloxane-based agents

Paraffin-based agents (most severe contamination)

Fluorinated release agents

In addition, the following factors significantly amplify mold contamination:

Selection of mold coating materials

Mold surface finish and sandblasting treatment

Vulcanization temperature, time, and continuous production cycle

Temperature and humidity conditions during compound storage

In high-precision silicone rubber mold applications, the combined effect of these factors is particularly critical.


3. Three-Stage Evolution Mechanism of Mold Cavity Contamination

Stage 1: Migration of Contaminants

Under high-temperature conditions, vulcanization additives and reaction by-products migrate from inside the rubber compound toward the mold cavity surface.

Stage 2: Adhesion and Deposition

These substances adhere to and deposit on the metal mold surface, gradually forming hard-to-remove oxidized layers through thermal oxidation reactions.

Stage 3: Aging and Transfer

With prolonged continuous use, contaminants undergo aging and degradation:

A portion becomes firmly adhered to the mold cavity

Another portion transfers to the surface of vulcanized rubber products, causing impurities, surface cracks, and appearance defects

This is extremely unfavorable for manufacturers pursuing high-yield rubber molds.


4. Influence of Mold Structure and Surface Treatment on Contamination

In rubber mold manufacturing and silicone rubber mold processing:

High-polish, chrome-plated, or alloy-coated molds low contamination tendency

Sandblasted, matte, or textured molds high contamination retention

Particular attention should be paid to the fact that sandblasting-induced surface roughness can create an “anchoring effect” during vulcanization, leading to mechanical interlocking between rubber and mold surfaces. This results in severe sticking, demolding difficulty, and secondary contamination.

To address this issue, the following surface enhancement solutions are recommended:

Chrome plating

Tungsten-chromium coatings

Vanadium-cobalt alloy coatings

These technologies have been widely validated in high-precision silicone rubber molds.


5. Comprehensive Strategies for Reducing Mold Contamination

1️⃣ Optimization of Compound Formulation

Select compounding ingredients with good rubber compatibility, low migration, and low blooming tendency

Reduce low-molecular substances prone to blooming and deposition

2️⃣ Optimization of Mold Structure Design

Ensure smooth rubber flow channels

Minimize dead corners and retention zones, allowing contaminants to be stripped away during rubber flow even if contamination occurs

3️⃣ Optimization of Mold Surface Engineering

Prioritize electroplated or alloy-coated surfaces

Avoid unnecessary rough sandblasting treatments

4️⃣ Cleaning and Maintenance Mechanisms

Common mold-cleaning methods include:

Mechanical cleaning (wet, dry, manual polishing)

Chemical cleaning (acid cleaning / alkaline cleaning)

Ultrasonic cleaning

Currently, chemical cleaning is the most widely used method, though environmental protection requirements and operator safety must be carefully considered. Commercial mold-cleaning liquids and mold-cleaning rubber compounds may also be used as auxiliary solutions.


Conclusion

Mold cavity contamination in compression-molded rubber products is universal, recurrent, and systematic in nature. Only through systematic optimization of:

Compound formulation design

Mold material selection

Surface treatment technologies

Process control parameters

can manufacturers truly achieve:

High-yield rubber molds

Stable mass production of high-precision silicone rubber molds

Sustained and reliable production performance after rapid rubber mold delivery

Analysis of Mold Contamination and Corrosion Mechanisms in the Production of Compression-Molded Rubber Products

In the production and processing of compression-molded rubber productsrubber molds are critical tools for controlling and ensuring product geometryassembly dimensions, and compliance with dimensional tolerances

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