
Vulcanizing Rubber with Sulfur — The Accidental Discovery That Put Tyres on the Road
Natural rubber — the dried latex of the Hevea brasiliensis tree — has a fatal flaw: it becomes sticky and soft in summer heat and brittle and cracked in winter cold. For decades after its introduction to Europe, rubber was a curiosity with limited practical use. Raincoats made from it stuck together in hot weather; rubber shoes crumbled in the frost. The problem was that natural rubber is a thermoplastic — its long polyisoprene chains (C₅H₈)ₙ slide past each other when warm and lock rigidly when cold.
In 1839, Charles Goodyear, an American inventor who had spent years obsessing over rubber, accidentally dropped a piece of rubber mixed with sulfur onto a hot stove. Instead of melting, the rubber charred at the edges but remained firm and elastic in the centre — it had been transformed. Goodyear had discovered vulcanization: heating rubber with sulfur causes the sulfur atoms to form covalent cross-links between adjacent polyisoprene chains, creating a three-dimensional network. The chains can no longer slide past each other (no more stickiness) but the cross-links are flexible enough to allow stretching (no more brittleness).
The name 'vulcanization' was coined by Thomas Hancock (who independently developed the process in England) after Vulcan, the Roman god of fire. The degree of vulcanization depends on the sulfur content: 1–3% sulfur produces soft, flexible rubber (for tyres and gloves), 25–30% produces hard, rigid rubber (ebonite, used for combs, electrical insulators, and bowling balls).
This demonstration follows Goodyear's core discovery: dissolving natural rubber in turpentine, mixing with sulfur, and heating to cross-link the polymer chains.
SAFETY WARNING: Turpentine is flammable and its vapours are narcotic. Heating rubber and sulfur produces sulfur dioxide fumes. Work in a well-ventilated area or fume hood. Never heat the rubber-sulfur mixture with an open flame — use an oven or hot plate.
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