PVC PDF
PVC PDF
PVC PDF
Poly(vinyl chloride)
1. Introduction
Poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) has a chemistry and a physical structure that makes it
broadly unique in the polymer world. PVC (often referred to vinyls or vinyl resins) is
made commercially at several molecular weights, depending on the intended
applications: from Mw = 39000 g/mol, to Mw = 168000 g/mol. PVC chemistry follows:
(I)
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hydrocarbons and thus are highly dependent on supplies of oil and gas; whereas PVC is
much less dependent on the supply of oil and gas.
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Additionally, the hazards in a fire are mainly carbon monoxide and heat; these are
especially a problem with materials other than vinyl that readily burn. When forced to
burn, vinyl produces carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen chloride. Of these,
the most hazardous is carbon monoxide. Hydrogen chloride is an irritant gas that can be
lethal at extremely high levels, which are never reached or even approached in real fires.
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3. Polymerization
Vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) is a clear, colorless liquid that boils at -13 ºC. VCM is
polymerized via free-radical methods, Scheme 1. VCM has a liquid density at normal
polymerization temperature between 0.85-0.9 g/cm3. The polymer has a density of 1.4
g/cm3 which is a sign of the large shrinkage during polymerization.
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o Pumps
o Slight heating of the storage tank to generate enough pressure for monomer transfer
o Gravity transfer
Nitrogen does not interfere with the polymerization; however, because nitrogen is
soluble in the monomer and not soluble in the polymer, significant pressure can build up
in the polymerization vessel during polymerizations containing nitrogen, especially if
there is not a lot of headspace in the vessel.
3.3 Polymerization
Because of the low boiling point of the monomer and the limited stability of the
polymer, polymerization of vinyl chloride must be carried out under conditions giving
rapid reactions at low temperatures (polymerization temperature is 50 ºC). Bulk
polymerization cannot be carried to high conversions because of local overheating
leading to deterioration of the polymer. Solvents are often used to prevent this effect.
PVC is mostly produced by suspension polymerization since the reaction can be
controlled better.
Polymerization kinetics
A typical reaction rate curve of heat versus conversion is shown in Figure 4. This curve
is generated by a computer model simulation, but similar curves result from real
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measurements of the heat release from actual polymerization reactions. The solid line is
the predicted reaction curve and the dotted line is the actual heat that must be removed
from polymerization reactor. Note that the dotted line is slightly lower than the solid line,
because of the effect of water injection. Starting at about 60% conversion, a rate peak is
observed. The rate peak starts when all of the liquid monomer has been consumed and
pressure-drop starts. Further polymerization produces a change in the composition of the
remaining swollen polymer phase. As the composition changes, the local mobility of the
growing polymer chain is reduced relative to the mobility of the low molecular weight
monomer. The radicals are not able to find each other easily. The termination rate is
therefore reduced, causing the concentration of free radicals to rise and the rate of
polymerization rises accordingly. At approx. 75% conversion, the composition has
changed enough that now the monomer has reduced mobility and concentration and the
polymerization rate starts to fall owing to a reduced propagation rate. At just over 90%
conversion, the rate essentially approaches zero, because the polymer VCM phase passes
through the glass transition temperature and essentially all mobility stops. Commercially,
reacting beyond approximately 80-85% conversion is not very efficient. In order to keep
this reaction under control during the rate peak, the polymerization reactor used for this
reaction would need to be able to remove 2250 kilowatts of energy, allowing a slightly
excess heat removal capability for margin of error. Note that the polymerization depicted
in Figure 4 has a built-in safety feature. The reaction rate accelerates at 60% conversion
as the pressure is dropping. A run away reaction at this conversion is not likely to
produce a reactor over-pressurization situation.
Figure 4. Plot of heat load versus conversion predicted by a computer model for an
isothermal polymerization.
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product results. It is often good practice to meter the multifunctional monomer to keep its
concentration low.
Making lower molecular weight polymers is a bit more challenging. Going up in
polymerization temperature is easy from a heat transfer perspective but usually the
polymerization vessel cannot withstand the VCM vapor pressure. In order to make lower
molecular weight PVC it is often necessary to employ chain transfer agents. Unlike
polyolefins, however, there are no effective chain transfer agents yet. All of them have
some problem. Some produce PVC with poor heat stability. Some retard the
polymerization rate too much. Some require such a high level that they must be recovered
with the VCM (with the resulting contamination of the recovered monomer). The most
popular chain transfer agent in use today is 2-mercapto-ethanol (2-ME), which is not a
real chain transfer agent, but rather it is a chain terminator. Additional initiator is needed
to overcome the rate reduction. Another problem associated with making low molecular
weight polymer is that high temperature and low molecular weight produces particularly
soft and sticky primary particles and porosity is lost. Often, one's ability to make a very
low molecular weight PVC is related to having a secondary dispersant that can produce
enough porosity to allow effective VCM recovery.
3.5 Structure
PVC has a linear structure formed by either head to tail (most common) or head to hear
addition of monomer molecules to the growing polymer chain, Figure 5. Thus, the
molecular structure is primarily –CH2- units alternating with –CHCl- units.
(A) (B)
Figure 5. Head-to-tail (A) and head-to head (B) addition of VCM to the growing PVC chain,
X ≡ Cl.
PVC shows a tendency to add via syndiotactic placement; it is found that PVC is
approximately 56 % syndiotactic at 50 ºC polymerization temperature. This irregularity
of structure accounts for its low crystallinity. However, PVC achieves strength because of
the bulky polymer chains as a consequence of the large Cl groups on every other carbon.
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3.6 Stability
PVC is almost certainly the least naturally stable polymer in commercial use. During
processing, storage and utilization, PVC degrades as it is exposed to high temperatures,
high mechanical stresses or ultraviolet light, all in the presence of oxygen. Degradation of
the polymer occurs by successive elimination of hydrogen chloride (HCl), which is called
dehydrochlorination, yielding long polyenes, Scheme 2, which are consequently causing
discoloration, deterioration of the mechanical properties and a lowering of the chemical
resistance.
Scheme 2 Dehydrochlorination
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the formation of a lot of different types of structural irregularities. Some of these defects
are shown to have a dramatic influence on the thermal stability. The most occurring
structural defects in PVC are a wide range of branches, which are formed by various
routes. Some of them seem to affect the thermal stability while others are completely
harmless. The frequently occurring branches and the most important types of branches
concerning the thermal stability of PVC are described below.
Besides head-to-head units within the polymer backbone, head-to-head emplacement
of VCM to a growing polymer chain can also result in other types of irregularities within
the chain. Chloromethyl (MB) and 1,2-dichloroethyl branches (EB) result from one or
two successive 1,2-Cl shifts respectively, followed by regular chain growth as is shown
in Scheme 3. The MB and EB structures are expected to have minor, if any, influence on
the initiation of dehydrochlorination of PVC.
This insignificant influence of MB and EB is probably due to the absence of tertiary
chlorine at the branchpoint carbons, as it has been proven that an increase in the amount
of tertiary chlorine in the polymer chain increases the thermal degradation. Other types of
branching do contain tertiary chlorine at the branchpoint carbon such as the 2,4-dichloro-
n-butyl branch and various types of long chain branching.
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Both BB and LCB are mainly formed when the monomer supply is almost exhausted.
Due to monomer starvation the growing macroradicals start reacting with themselves or
with neighboring polymer chains as described.
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Diethyl branches (DEB) seem also to be present in PVC fractions produced at very high
VCM conversions and therefore when monomer supply is almost exhausted. This type of
branching is believed to contribute significantly to the thermal degradation of the
polymer, due to the presence of two tertiary chlorines at the branchpoint carbons, Scheme
6.
Internal unsaturation, especially internal allylic chlorines, IA in Scheme 5, proved to
be one of the main structural defects influencing the thermal stability. Just like the
tertiary chlorines the amount of internal allylic chlorines increases dramatically when
monomer supply becomes exhausted. When the amount of allylic and tertiary chlorines in
commercial PVC as well as their reactivity towards thermal degradation is taken into
account, it seems that tertiary chlorine has a somewhat higher reactivity towards
dehydrochlorination.
The effect of head-to-head units, Scheme 3, in PVC on the thermal stability is still not
conclusively proven, but it is known that the amount of these units is very small,
presumably 0-0.2 per 1000 monomeric units. So if these structures have any influence on
the thermal stability, it will be minor compared to other structural irregularities.
Note that chloride groups in any of the defect structures are not stable and hence are
“labile”. The order of chloride lability is: internal allylic chlorides ≈ tertiary chlorides >
terminal allylic chlorides > ordinary secondary chlorides.
Labile chlorides account for less than 0.5 % of all chlorides in PVC, but their effect on
heat stability is dramatic. Because of their presence, PVC begins to noticeably degrade at
temperatures as low as 100 ºC and degrades rapidly in its processing range of 170-220
ºC.
3.7 Plasticization
PVC is a very tough and rigid material with extensive applications. Its range of
utilization is significantly expanded by plasticization, which converts rigid PVC, to
flexible PVC. Plasticization involves blending PVC with plasticizers (e.g., diisooctyl
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phthalate, tritolyl phosphate, epoxidized oils). The plasticizer imparts flexibility by acting
effectively as an ‘‘internal lubricant’’ between PVC chains.
3.8 Copolymers
VCM does not co-polymerize well. It has an unfavorable reactivity ratio with just
about every other monomer except vinyl acetate (VAC), 5-40 % vinyl acetate, Structure
II. Because of the unfavorable reactivity ratios, making other copolymers usually
involves long reactions with slow metering of one of the monomers (the one that reacts
fastest). This is required to produce what is known as a uniform co-polymer, where the
composition at the beginning of the polymerization is similar to that made at high
conversion. There is another general problem associated with copolymers. PVC is
insoluble in the monomer and this produces the porous internal structure that facilitates
monomer recovery. One of the reasons for this insolubility is that the polymer has a
certain level of crystallinity. Random copolymerization tends to break up the
crystallinity. Also, the fact that a second monomer is present changes polymer solubilities
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and makes the polymer become monomer soluble. This produces a non-porous particle
and alters the reaction kinetics dramatically. Today, most copolymers are made using
microsuspension or emulsion methods, because these processes produce small particles
that can be stripped of residual monomer. Copolymers entangle and fuse at lower
temperatures and flow more easily at lower melt temperatures, because they have low or
no crystallinity. Note that this copolymer has a Tg of 28 ºC.
Polymers containing around 10 % vinylidene chloride, Structure III, have better tensile
properties than PVC.
Acrylic esters have also been used to improve copolymer solubility and workability.
(II)
(III)
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