Plastics Additives
Plastics Additives
Plastics Additives
5. PLASTICS ADDITIVES
But the many thousands of dierent plastic products require a much greater
variety of properties and balance of properties. It might be possible to
develop a new polymer to meet each of these needs, but the time and cost
would be prohibitive. In most cases, it is much more convenient to use the
polymers that are commercially available and to improve individual
properties, and balance of properties, by the use of additives.
Thus, polymers are hardly ever used in pure form; they are almost always
optimized by the use of additives. In most cases, a few additives are
sucient. But in some polymer families, compounders escalate to much
larger numbers of additives so as to produce the processability and nal
properties they need. The most extreme examples are in vinyls, rubber,
coatings, and adhesives, where the number of additives in a compound can
easily reach 10 to 20 or even more!
The total tonnage of additives is conventionally about 18 percent of plastics
production. If we include polymers added in making polymer blends, the total
increases to about 25 percent. The major families of additives may be listed
in order of total tonnage as follows:
Fillers and reinforcements
Polymers for polymer blends
Plasticizers
Flame Retardants
Colorants
5.1. STABILIZERS
The primary covalent bonds that hold polymer molecules together are
generally quite stable, permitting their wide use in plastics, rubber, ber,
coatings, and adhesives. They are not perfectly stable, however (Table 5.1).
To a slight extent, they are in equilibrium with radical and ionic states,
which would be unstable and reactive. Input of energy via the following
processes:
Mechanical (especially shear and dynamic)
Thermal (in processing and in use)
Electrical (especially high voltage and high frequency)
Optical (especially UV and IR)
Chemical (especially oxygen, ozone, and moisture)
Biological (especially microorganisms)
increases this dissociation, resulting in cleavage or cross-linking, structural
changes, and reactions with atmospheric oxygen, moisture, and chemical
environments in general. These reactions can be used to modify polymers
and perhaps to recycle them but, more often, they cause degradation and
loss of properties in aging.
Chemical
Bond energy,
bond
kcal/mol
Chemical bond
Bond energy,
kcal/mol
C-F
116
(CH 3) 2CH-H
95
C 6H 5-N
110
C-O
93
C 6H 5-O
107
CH 3COCH 2-H
92
Si-O
106
(CH 3) 3C-H
91
CH 3-H
104
CH 2=CHCH 2-H
85
C 6H 5-H
104
C-N
82
C-C
101
N-N
37
C 6H 5-C 6H 5
100
O-O
34
systems as well.
4. Ultraviolet stabilizers are used to protect polymers in outdoor use against
the high-energy ultraviolet radiation from the sun, and occasionally indoors
when exposed to uorescent lights.
5. Biostabilizers are used to protect polymers against biological attack,
primarily by microorganisms.
5.1.1. Antioxidants
The attack of atmospheric oxygen on polymers is a free-radical reaction
accelerated by heat, particularly during processing, and also during longterm use above room temperature. Typical autoxidation reactions such as
10 days
10 days
0.025 percent
80
170
0.05
140
250
0.1
190
310
Days
0.03
70
0.09
120
0.15
150
0.2
160
0.4
200
0.5
220
Unstabilized
250
35
500
750
10
1000
17
Hours
0.2
60
0.4
115
0.6
170
18 )
(DSTDP).
IN
COMMERCIAL PLASTICS.
Percent
14
Higher phenols
42
Phosphites
31
Suldes
Other
207
PHOSPHITE.
This synergistic combination has always been unnecessarily secretive, sold
under vague names such as mixed metal, synergistic, and so on. It is
universally used for plasticized PVC, because it is soluble, economical, and
eective. The metal soap may be phenate, octoate, neodecanoate,
naphthenate, benzoate, laurate, myristate, palmitate, or stearate.
The Group IIB metal soap (Cd or Zn) is the primary stabilizer. It replaces an
unstable Cl atom by a stable ester group,
Cd is more reliable, but worries about toxicity have practically eliminated its
use. Zn is more powerful but tricky, so compounders have had to learn how to
handle it very carefully.
The Group IIA metal soap (Ba or Ca) is a reservoir to regenerate the essential
Group IIB metal soap:
Ba works best, but there is some worry about toxicity. Ca is less eective but
completely nontoxic, so it is used when there is worry about toxicity.
The epoxidized fatty ester may be epoxidized soybean oil for compatibility
and nontoxicity, or epoxidized tall oil esters for low cost and low-temperature
exibility. It is generally believed to function by neutralizing HCl. It may also
replace unstable Cl on the polymer or complex ZnCl
to keep it from
50
200
13
14
18
18
10
13
17
18
All ve together
30
60
13
15
Unstabilized
259
111
272
105
290
100
300
95
320
90
340
84
350
81
400
71
<350 nm
C=C
<250 nm
C=O
<360 nm
O-H
<320 nm
ROOH
<300 nm
There are a number of ways to protect plastic products for use outdoors, as
described below.
5.1.4.1. UV REFLECTORS.
If a UV-resistant material will reect UV light away from the polymer, this can
increase its lifetime tremendously. A metallized surface can give such
protection, and, if it is made extremely thin, it may be able to combine UV
stability and visible transparency. Pigmented uoropolymer and acrylic
coatings can be applied to the polymer, either by coextrusion of capstock or
by post-coating, and provide such stability. More simply, dispersion of TiO
and especially aluminum ake in the polymer can reect away most of the UV
before it reaches more than a few surface molecules of the polymer, and this
technique has been very popular.
5.1.4.2. UV ABSORBERS.
Certain classes of additives absorb UV so eciently that there is very little
UV left to attack the polymer. They also have the little-understood ability to
dispose of the excess energy harmlessly. o-hydroxy benzophenones, and
especially o-hydroxyphenyl benzotriazoles, are quite successful, even in
concentrations below 1 percent (Fig. 5.3, Tables 5.11 through 5.13). Salicylic
esters are less eective at lower cost. Carbon black is the most eective
additive for stabilizing against UV degradation (Table 5.14), but, of course, it
limits color to opaque black; also, it may generate so much heat that it can
cause thermal degradation. Zinc oxide is the most ecient inorganic UV
Hours
350
8002000
4000
6800
Hours
None
225
1 percent UV absorber
500
1 percent HALS
1225
2000
700 hr
2800 hr
40%
Black
82%
46 percent
Benzotriazoles
27 percent
Benzophenones
20 percent
Others
7 percent
Total
24,800 tons
Use in polymers
Polypropylene
45 percent
Polyethylene
29 percent
PVC
9 percent
Engineering plastics
7 percent
Styrenics
5 percent
Others
5 percent
5.1.4.6. PRODEGRADANTS.
When plastics accumulate in solid waste, it might be desirable to accelerate
their UV degradation. This has been accomplished semicommercially by
incorporating enough C=O groups to absorb UV energy and initiate
photodegradation processes. It has also been demonstrated experimentally
by adding transition metal compounds such as ferrous laurate to catalyze
photooxidation of the polymer (Table 5.16).
These techniques do not destroy the polymer, but they embrittle it enough to
crumble, and oxidize it enough to promote biodegradation later (Table 5.17).
Unstabilized, hr
Heat-stabilized, hr
118
384
0.01
167
0.1
167
1.0
95
2.0
47
None
4 months
High-density polyethylene
Trace
Heavy
Polystyrene
Trace
Trace
Trace
Slight
Trace
Moderate
copolymer
50 percent PS + 50 percent styrene/vinyl ether
copolymer
*.Trace = barely noticeable, slight = 1030% of surface, moderate = 3060% of surface,
5.1.5. Biostabilizers
Microorganisms such as bacteria, actinomycetes, and fungus can attack
plastics, producing discoloration and degradation of mechanical and
electrical properties. They thrive primarily at 20 to 30C and high humidity,
whenever they can nd a source of food. Natural polymers such as cellulose
and protein are a good source of food. Animal fats and vegetable oils are a
good source of food; when they are used in paints, alkyds, and urethanes,
these polymers are biodegradable. Synthetic polymers that contain aliphatic
hydroxyl and ester groups may be a good source of food; these include
polycaprolactone, polyester urethanes, and the new purposely biodegradable
polylactic acid, polyhydoxybutyrate, and polyhydroxyvalerate. Fairly sensitive
polymers include polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl alcohol, and ethylene/vinyl
acetate. Most other polymers are not inherently biodegradable. However,
monomeric additives are often an excellent source of food and primary focus
of biological attack: ester plasticizers, epoxy ester stabilizers, and natural
esters used in polyurethanes and fatty ester lubricants are the most common
problems. (Starch llers have actually been used to incorporate
biodegradability in plastics.) A variety of chemicals can be used to stabilize
plastics against biological attack.
Testing usually begins by placing plastics samples in Petri dishes, injecting
microorganisms, and observing whether they grow. Further testing may
include humidity, soil burial, and other natural exposures. A major problem is
that species of microorganisms vary from one geographic region to another,
so it is hard to design reliable broad-spectrum laboratory tests and to
recommend successful additives from one region to another.
The greatest problem is dierential toxicity. Any chemical that is toxic to
microorganisms will probably be toxic to macroorganisms such as ourselves.
Thus, it is necessary to distinguish those additives that oer maximum
toxicity toward microorganisms along with minimum toxicity toward
macroorganisms, and to dene the critical balance for dierent plastic
products.
5.1.5.1. 10,10-OXY-BIS( PHENOXARSINE) (OBPA).
5.1.5.2. 2-N-OCTYL-4-ISOTHIAZOLINE-3-ONE.
This (Fig. 5.4II) is a newer antimicrobial that is nontoxic to humans and is
used at 3 percent in vinyls and paints.
5.1.5.3. TRICHLOROMETHYL THIO PHTHALIMIDE.
This (Fig. 5.4III) is harmless to humans and is useful at 0.25 to 0.50 percent
to control actinomycetes, which cause pink staining of plasticized vinyls.
5.1.5.4. DIPHENYL ANTIMONY 2-ETHYLHEXOATE.
This (Fig. 5.4IV) is approved for use in vinyl shower curtains, wallpaper,
upholstery, and rug underlay.
5.1.5.5. COPPER Q UINOLINOLATE.
This (Fig. 5.4V) is relatively harmless to humans. Used at 0.5 percent, it
controls mildew. Because of its deep yellow-green color, it is used mainly for
military purposes.
5.1.5.6. TRIBUTYL TIN O XIDES.
These (Fig. 5.4VI) have been useful in vinyls, polyurethanes, and marine
paints. Use is decreasing because of worry about toxicity.
5.1.5.7. COPPER POWDER.
At high loading (70 percent), copper powder has been recommended for
control of fouling in marine paints.
5.1.5.8. ALKYL AMINES.
Alkyl amines have been grafted onto polymer surfaces in recent research to
make them bactericidal.
5.1.5.9. USE
IN
COMMERCIAL PLASTICS.
The major use is in plasticized PVC to protect the ester plasticizers. Other
wide uses are in polyester urethanes and in oil paints. Typical products
include shower curtains, wall and oor coverings, carpet underlay, marine
upholstery, awnings, refrigerator gasketing, weatherstripping, swimming
pool liners, water beds, and hospital sheeting.
Most llers and bers are inorganic materials of high density, polarity,
modulus, melting point, refractive index, and solvent resistance, so
incorporating them into organic polymers produces major changes in
properties.
5.2.1.1. PACKING.
Many of these properties are proportional to the volume fraction of llers or
bers added. Maximum packing fraction can be calculated geometrically and
conrmed experimentally. For spherical particles, maximum packing fraction
can go as high as 85 percent. For conventional bers, it can go as high as 91
percent. Man-made bers with rectangular or hexagonal cross sections are
easy to make and theoretically can be packed neatly to approach 100
percent!
5.2.1.2. PROCESSABILITY.
Dispersion of polar llers and bers in the molten polymer requires special
care to produce interfacial wetting and shear mixing to produce dispersion.
Fillers and bers rubbing against screws and channels produce frictional
heating, and they add thermal conductivity; both eects can speed the
processing cycle. They do increase viscosity considerably, which makes
processing more dicult, and they are so hard that abrasion of process
equipment requires more frequent replacement.
5.2.1.3. MATHEMATICAL MODELING.
Mathematical modeling can attempt to predict and rationalize eects on
properties but requires so many assumptions that it leaves quite a gap
between theory and practice.
5.2.1.4. MODULUS.
Modulus is increased greatly, because, when exible polymer molecules bump
against the hard surface of inorganic particles, they lose much of their
inherent exibility. The eect is most pronounced for bers in the axial
direction, because, even if the polymer is willing to respond, the highmodulus bers absolutely refuse to respond at all. Creep Resistance
correlates with modulus, both theoretically and practically. This can bring
performance of plastics much closer metals and ceramics.
5.2.1.5. BREAKING S TRENGTH.
Breaking strength is increased greatly by continuous bers; when the
polymer is ready to fail, the high-strength bers absolutely are not. Short
bers may or may not increase strength somewhat, depending on stresstransfer across the ber/ polymer interface; they may actually decrease it,
because the ber ends act as stress concentrators, causing premature
failure. Particulate llers usually decrease strength due to stress
concentration at sharp edges and corners of the ller particles.
5.2.1.6. IMPACT S TRENGTH.
This is increased tremendously by continuous bers ( Fig. 5.5); they seem to
distribute the shock over the entire length of the ber so that the stress at
any one point is very small. Short bers are unpredictable; they may increase
impact strength moderately or not at all, or even decrease it, their ends
acting as stress concentrators. Particulate llers almost always decrease
impact strength, again due to stress concentration at their sharp edges and
corners. Impact strength theory is seriously handicapped by the assumption
that the same failure mechanisms operate at both low speed and high speed;
it would be much better to recognize that high-speed impact failure is a
completely dierent phenomenon that deserves its own theoretical analysis.
5.2.1.7. FRICTION
AND
ABRASION RESISTANCE.
These qualities are increased by the sharp edges of ller particles and the
sharp ends of bers that protrude from the surface of the polymer matrix.
5.2.1.8. COEFFICIENT
OF
CTE is inverse to the attractive forces holding the molecules together. The
weak secondary attractions between polymer molecules permit a high rate of
thermal expansion, whereas the strong primary forces in inorganic materials
restrict them to a much lower rate of thermal expansion. For simple extender
llers, the expansion rates of polymer and ller are simply additive, so the
CTE simply decreases in proportion to volume fraction of simple extender
llers (Fig. 5.6). Reinforcing llers are more eective, and reinforcing bers
are most eective in reducing thermal expansion, because they restrict the
molecular motion of the polymer molecules. This brings plastics closer to the
performance of metals and ceramics.
AND
LOSS.
These are much higher in highly polar inorganic materials, so llers and
bers generally increase them proportionally in plastics.
Unlled HDT, C
Glass ber, %
Filled HDT, C
110
10
160
Nylon 6
60
14
205
Nylon 66
71
13
243
PBT
67
10
200
PET
70
15
210
Acetal
5.2.1.13. O PACITY.
Opacity results from the fact that inorganic llers and bers are denser than
organic polymers, so the speed of light is slower, so their refractive index is
higher, so light waves are scattered and dispersed as they pass through the
interface. Fillers are often used to produce opacity. Conversely, to seek
transparency in lled and reinforced polymers, one must either match the
refractive indices of the two phases or reduce the particle size below the
wavelength of visible light; both of these approaches are very dicult.
5.2.1.14. S WELLING
AND
PERMEATION.
These are reduced, because llers and bers restrict free volume and
mobility of the polymer matrix, making it harder for small molecules of liquids
and gases to dissolve and diuse through the polymer, and because the small
molecules must permeate around the impervious particlesa tortuous
route that further impedes permeability. On the other hand, the high polarity
of most llers and bers may attract moisture to penetrate along their
interface with the polymer, weakening stress transfer across the interface,
and often plasticizing and even hydrolyzing the polymer; this is particularly
noticeable in outdoor weathering.
5.2.1.15. COST.
The cost of simple extender llers may be lower than polymers on a weight
basis, but their higher density, more dicult processability, and decrease in
strength properties may eliminate any overall economy. Fillers should be
chosen primarily for their benecial eects on technical properties; if they
also decrease cost, this is simply an added benet. Reinforcing bers
increase the cost of commodity plastics, but they may actually reduce the
cost of some high-end engineering thermoplastics.
5.2.2. Extender Fillers
Simple inorganic particles are generally added to plastics to increase
modulus, friction, and opacity, and to reduce raw material cost.
5.2.2.1. GLASS MICROSPHERES.
Glass microspheres range in size from 5000 down to 4 m and may be solid or
hollow down to one tenth of solid density. Solid spheres improve melt
structure . The aromatic carbon rings are attracted to the C=C bonds in
rubber and may graft to them during vulcanization. They give such highstrength reinforcement of rubber that their use is almost universal. For some
reason, they do not reinforce the strength of plastics but are very useful for
UV stabilization and electrical semiconductivity.
5.2.3.8. FUMED AEROSIL S ILICA .
This is produced by mixing SiCl
Thermoset polyester/glass
fpi
0.500
7.5
0.375
6.5
0.250
5.5
0.125
3.0
10
20
30
40
50
60
410
650
850
1300
1600
2200
2800
15
20
29
38
42
47
50
12
14
19
27
31
32
33
0.9
0.8
1.2
2.0
2.6
2.6
2.6
150
485
485
490
500
500
500
Thermal
4.5
2.7
2.3
1.8
1.4
1.0
0.9
%
Flexural
modulus, kpsi
Flexural
strength, kpsi
Tensile
strength, kpsi
Impact
strength, fpi
expansion, 10
5
/F
AND
ABRASION RESISTANCE.
In plastic gears and bearings, these qualities are improved by adding solid
powders such as brass, molybdenum sulde, graphite, polyethylene, and
especially polytetrauoroethylene.
Silver
240
Copper
220
Aluminum
110
Steel
Al 2O
40
20
Epoxy + silver
Epoxy + aluminum
Epoxy + Al 2O
Epoxy alone
Air
0.1
0.01
AND
O PACITY.
These features are, of course, produced by llers, both inorganic and organic
(Sec. 5.8), in much lower concentrations than are normally considered
llers.
5.2.5.7. ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT S TABILIZATION.
UV light stabilization is produced by llers that reect UV, particularly
aluminum ake and TiO 2, and by llers that absorb UV radiation and reduce
it to harmless wavelengths, particularly carbon black and zinc oxide (Sec.
5.1.4).
Graphite
Silver-lled epoxy
Nickel
by Weight of Fiber
Fiber
Carbon
Aluminum
Brass
Copper
5.2.5.8. IMPERMEABILITY.
Impermeability (barrier performance) is produced by plate-like akes, which
increase the tortuous path that permeating molecules must seek.
5.2.5.9. CONTROLLED DEGRADABILITY.
This has been produced by use of biodegradable llers such as starch
powder. Once the ller has disappeared, the polymer crumbles, and the high
surface area accelerates oxidative and biodegradation.
5.2.5.10. CARBON NANOTUBES.
These are tiny hollow bers made up of carbon atoms arranged in a
hexagonal pattern, in at sheets that roll up into seamless tubes. Diameters
range from 1 to 200 nm and aspect ratios up to 10,000! Their modulus,
strength, and thermal and electrical conductivity are superior to graphite
and carbon ber. Used at 1 to 5 percent in plastics, they provide very high
modulus, strength, and thermal and electrical conductivity. Processing is
dicult, and cost is extremely high, but researchers are optimistic about
their future.
5.2.5.11. TECHNICAL S UMMARY
The relative eects of llers and reinforcements on plastics may be claried
by summarizing them in tabular form (Table 5.25). In the table, (+) means an
increase in the property, (++) means a great increase, () means a decrease,
( ) means a great decrease, and () means the eect varies depending on
the specic ller, ber, polymer, or test.
Extender
Reinforcing
Short
Continuous
Fillers
Fillers
Fibers
Fibers
Melt processability
Modulus
++
++
Creep resistance
++
++
Strength
++
Impact strength
++
Friction
Abrasion resistance
Thermal conductivity
Flame retardance
Transparency
Cost
++
5.2.5.12. MARKETS
Approximate U.S. tonnage of llers and reinforcements for plastics is about
16 billion pounds per year (Tables 5.26 and 5.27).
Millions of lb
Calcium carbonate
8500
Glass Fiber
4000
Alumina trihydrate
520
Clay
510
Titanium dioxide
490
Wollastonite
370
Talc
320
Silica
250
Percent
Transportation
25
Construction
21
Corrosion resistance
16
Marine
13
Electrical/electronic
Consumer products
Aerospace
Other
17 H 35
chain
AND
AMIDES.
These have been oered as low-cost coupling agents. Their main service
appears to be as dispersing agents.
5.3.2.7. POLYPROPYLENE/ACID GRAFTS.
Grafts have been made with maleic anhydride or acrylic acid. These are
useful for example in coupling talc and mica into polypropylene.
5.3.3. Application Techniques
Most often, the ller and coupling agent are slurried in water, the coupling
agent hydrolyzes Si-OR + H 2O Si-OH and reacts with the Si-OH on the ller
surface to form Si-OSi ller-to-coupling agent bonds. Alternatively, the
coupling agent can be dry-blended with the ller by tumbling at controlled
humidity, but this requires more skill. In-situ treatment is based on adding
both ller and coupling agent to the molten polymer; this wastes some
coupling agent, but it eliminates the cost of a separate pretreatment step.
Perhaps most promising is vapor-phase application of the coupling agent, as
is done in the manufacture of glass ber, where the coupling agent acts rst
to protect the glass bers and later to bond them to the polymer matrix.
5.3.4. Coupling Agent Theory
There are a variety of theories to explain the action of coupling agents.
(IPNs) may be postulated when the organosilane extends into the polymer
matrix. This concept may be broadened to consider the formation of a
gradually modulated interphase rather than a sharp monomolecular
interface. Morphology of the coupling agent layer has been studied by
electron microscopy, and some researchers believe the coupling agent
accumulates in tiny hills on the glass ber surface, and these hills act like the
pins in a mechanical assembly, preventing the ber from pulling out of the
polymer matrix. Coupling agent may create friction between the ber and
the polymer matrix, increasing the stress needed to pull the bers out of the
matrix.
5.3.5. Practical Benets of Coupling Agents
Coupling agent theory and salesmanship are often more optimistic than
practical results. It is important to be realistic about practical benets
outlined below.
5.3.5.1. PROTECTION
OF
GLASS FIBERS.
5.4. PLASTICIZERS
Plasticizers are most commonly liquid esters of low volatility, which are
blended into rigid thermoplastic polymers to make them soft and exible.
Most are esters of phthalic, phosphoric, and adipic acids. Major use is in
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) elastoplastics. Another major use, rarely mentioned
in the literature, is the addition of hydrocarbon oils to rubber to improve
processability. Plasticizers are also used to improve melt processability and
toughness of rigid plastics such as cellulose esters and ethers, and they are
used in a variety of specialized applications. In some cases, they perform dual
functions such as thermal stabilization or ame retardance. This gives the
individual processor the ability to tailor properties for each product.
5.4.1. Compatibility
The rst requirement of a plasticizer is that it should be compatible with the
polymer; that is, it should be completely miscible and remain permanently in
the polymer. In general, this requires that polymer and plasticizer should
have solubility parameters within one to two units of each other. Strong
mutual hydrogen-bonding is a second factor favoring compatibility. And low
molecular weight also favors miscibility.
polymer; rigid units such as benzene rings are much less ecient. (2) Low
polarity and low hydrogen-bonding provide less attraction between polymer
and plasticizer (borderline compatibility), permitting easier bondingdebonding equilibrium, which favors molecular mobility and exibility. (3)
Lower-molecular-weight plasticizers have more mobility and favor greater
exibility.
5.4.3. Eects on Other Properties
5.4.3.1. PROCESSABILITY.
Plasticizers are often used to increase melt ow during processing,
particularly in rubber, cellulosic plastics, and coatings. In vinyl plastisol
technology, powdered resin is slurried in nonsolvent plasticizer at room
temperature for easy processing in low-cost equipment and then heated to
dissolve and cooled to gel into the nal product.
5.4.3.2. MECHANICAL PROPERTIES.
age of 101.
5.4.4. Permanence
Plasticizer failure can shorten the useful life of the plastic product. Failure
can be either loss of plasticizer (it is fugitive) or degradation of the
plasticizer (aging).
5.4.4.1. FUGITIVITY.
Plasticizer may escape for a number of reasons. Volatility is gradual
evaporation at higher temperatures, such as fogging of auto windshields in
hot weather, and shrinkage and embrittlement of electrical wire and cable
insulation. Extraction of plasticizer by gasoline, motor oil, solvents, or even
soapy water causes stiening of jackets and gloves in dry cleaning and of
shower curtains and baby pants in soapy water. Exu-
OLYSTYRENE.
Plasticizer
Phthalates
69
Phosphates
Epoxy esters
Trimellitates
Glutarates
Azelates
Adipates
Others
Polyesters
Steel molds, extrusion dies, and rolls have high surface energy; molten
polymers have much lower surface energy. This makes the polymer coat and
stick to the steel equipment. Lubricants that interface between polymer and
steel can help to release the plastic product from the mold, die, or roll. This
can speed processing and avoid distortion of the product when it is pulled
away from the steel.
Die swell following extrusion can be reduced by addition of lubricants. They
may function by plasticizing the polymer, permitting molecules to disentangle
and accept the shape of the die, or they may function by reducing adhesion
between the polymer extrudate and the steel die, thus releasing the product
without distortion.
Gloss may be hurt by friction between polymer and extrusion die, producing
microscopic roughening of the surface. A lubricant that reduces adhesion
and friction between polymer and steel can thus reduce roughening and
increase surface gloss.
More serious adhesion and friction between polymer and extrusion die can
cause melt fracture in the form of sharkskin, matte, or orange peel. All of
these can be reduced by a lubricant that reduces adhesion and friction at the
interface.
Slip agents are added to polymers for lm production. They exude to the
surface of the lm and lubricate it, keeping the lms from sticking to each
other and making it easier for them to slide over each other and to separate
from each other. This is helpful in processing, both for speeding production
and to avoid distortion.
5.5.2. Lubricants in Final Products
Lubricants may be added to a polymer to produce lubricity in the nal
product. The eects are discussed below.
Antiblocking agents (atting agents) may be added to polymers for lm
production. They roughen the surface of the lms, reducing surface contact
and thus reducing adhesion between them, making it easier to separate them
in use. This is particularly important in packaging lm and bags.
Gears and bearings made from metals have high polar attraction, which
can be adjusted to balance the miscibility of the lubricant in the polymer and
thus adjust its relative internal versus external performance.
Polyvinyl chloride
44
Styrenics
12
Polyolens
Other thermoplastics
Thermosets
33
0.19
AND
ABS.
FOR
RIGID PVC.
m)
g)
MW polyolen.
5.5.6.9.4. NYLON.
Mentioned most often is 0.1 percent of silica. Others mentioned include Na
benzoate, minerals, MoS 2, FeS, TiO 2, talc, Na phenyl phosphinate, and
higher-MP polymers.
5.5.7. Eects of Lubricants on Other Final Properties
Fogging is caused by condensation of moisture on clear lm, forming
droplets that scatter light. It is a problem in food packaging for refrigerator
and freezer display and in agriculture for greenhouses. It is worst on
hydrophobic lms of low surface energy, particularly polyolens. Some
lubricants also serve as antifogging agents. Glycerol monoesters, sorbitol
esters, and polyethoxylates of fatty acids and alcohols are designed for
semimiscibility, to exude to the surface of the lm. Once there, they provide a
hydrophilic surface of higher surface energy. Moisture that condenses on the
surface is able to wet and spread across the surface in a uniform lm, which
remains transparent.
As mentioned earlier, when lubricants smooth the surface of extruded
products, this can increase gloss.
One negative eect is often encountered in the use of silicones. While they
are very abhesive and prevent polymer from sticking to steel process
equipment, they also prevent later postprocessing such as printing,
decorating, and adhesive bonding. It has been suggested that this is a
problem mainly in dimethyl silicones and may be avoided by using mixed
methyl/aryl silicones.
Air can be whipped into liquid plastisol or used to froth liquid polyurethane
formulations. In hot processing, where air could cause oxidative degradation,
2.
This is liqueed at high pressure, forced into the molten polymer, and then
allowed to expand and form gas bubbles. This process has been successful in
thermoplastic structural foams.
5.6.3. Chemical Foaming Agents
5.6.3.1. S ODIUM BICARBONATE + CITRIC AID .
The mixed powders are dry-coated onto foamable polystyrene beads. When
the beads are steamed to foam them, the powders dissolve and react to form
CO 2. The CO
forms.
5.6.3.3. AZO COMPOUNDS.
Commercial chemical foaming agents are all organic nitrogen compounds of
the general formula R-N-N-R. During the heat of melt processing, they
decompose, liberating nitrogen and other gases. Their two most critical
properties are (1) decomposition temperature and (2) gas yield in ml from 1
g of solid foaming agent. The leading commercial materials may be arranged
by decomposition temperature (shown in Table 5.30).
Decomposition temperature,
Gas yield in
ml/g at STP
TSH
105132
115
OBSH
149190
125
110200235
220
TSSC
193235
146
5PT
232288
190
AZDN (ABFA)
OR
ABFA [AZO-BIS(FORMAMIDE)].
Catalysts permit use at lower temperatures; coarse particle size permits use
at higher temperatures. It is widely used in commodity thermoplastics and
even some engineering thermoplastics; about 90 percent of the market.
5.6.3.3.4. TSSC: P-TOLUENE S ULFONYL S EMICARBAZIDE.
Somewhat better for engineering thermoplastics.
5.6.3.3.5. 5PT: 5-PHENYL TETRAZOLE.
For engineering thermoplastics.
5.6.3.3.6. POLYPHENYLENE S ULFOXIDE (300
TO
400C).
IN
PROCESSING.
The amount of chemical foaming agent used depends mainly on the process
(see Table 5.31).
%
24
0.21.0
0.30.5
0.050.1
Conventional materials (wood, fabric, paper, paint) burn. In a re, steel melts,
and concrete crumbles. This causes much damage to property and loss of
life. People have had to cope with this for thousands of years, and they
simply accept it. When new synthetic polymers burn in a re, people are very
upset, and they demand that we remedy the problem.
Aside from simple burning, res produce several related problems that may
be even more serious. When res produce smoke, people caught in the re
may be unable to see the escape route. Indoor res in a limited air supply
produce carbon monoxide, and res involving halogens will produce halogen
and hydrogen halide gases, whose toxicity may rob people of the will to
escape. Sophisticated electronic equipment can be corroded by acid
combustion gases, resulting in huge replacement costs. Thermoplastic
ceilings may melt and drip hot molten burning plastic on remen trying to
ght the re.
5.7.1. Testing
Testing is a major problem. Many experts consider all laboratory-scale tests
to be unrealistic and irrelevant. Large-scale tests require larger batches of
material than are available in research and development. Real res occur
under such a variety of conditions that they are very dicult to correlate
with laboratory data. And legal problems have arisen from laymens
misunderstanding of technical terminology, greatly limiting our ability to
record and communicate test data.
Laboratory testing has gone through a series of fads: burning/nonburning,
rate of burning, oxygen index, radiant panel, char formation, smoke
generation, toxicity of combustion gases, calorimetry, and thermal
degradation. Practical testing has been governed by Underwriters
Laboratory pass/fail, building industry tunnel tests, insurance company
room-corner tests, and review of actual res.
5.7.2. Flammability of Plastics
For simple laboratory evaluation, oxygen index is the percentage of oxygen
in air that is just sucient to support burning (see Table 5.32).
Oxygen
Polymer
index, %
Oxygen
index, %
Polyoxymethylene
15
Nylon
22
Polyethylene
17
(Wood
24)
Polypropylene
l7
Polyphenylene ether
26
Polymethyl
17
Polycarbonate
26
Cellulose acetate
17
Polysulfone
30
Polystyrene
18
Silicone
30
ABS
18
Polyvinylidene uoride
44
Phenol-formaldehyde
18
Polyvinyl chloride
45
Epoxy
18
Polyvinylidene chloride
60
Polyesters
20
Polytetrauoroethylene
95
methacrylate
Normal air is 21 percent oxygen. Polymers with an oxygen index below 21 will
burn. Polymers above 21 can be burned in a strong ame but may selfextinguish if left alone.
Thus, it is possible to choose a polymer to meet most ame-retardant
requirements. However, in terms of other properties, especially economics, it
is more common to use additives to increase the ame retardance of the
commonly used polymer.
5.7.3. Flame Retardants
There are certain ingredients that denitely increase ame retardance:
organic phosphorus, organic bromine, organic chlorine, antimony oxide as
synergist for the halogens, and water of hydration.
5.7.3.1. O RGANIC PHOSPHORUS.
This is the most ame-retardant element in the periodic table. It is generally
used as phosphate ester plasticizers or built into polyols for polyesters and
OF
HYDRATION.
A reman uses water to put out a re. A plastics chemist can do the same.
Alumina trihydrate Al(OH)
above 320C. This is stable enough for many plastic processes and provides
just as good ame retardance as alumina trihydrate, so it has become very
OF
USE.
5.8. COLORANTS
One-third of all plastics are used in natural uncolored form, and the other
5.9. ANTISTATS
When two materials are in contact with each other, electrons migrate across
the interface. When they are separated, some electrons may be caught on
12
is statically dissipative, 10
shielding, 10
0 to 3
26
1012
is slightly conductive, 10
is semiconductive, and 10
3 to 5
is antistatic, 10
is EMI
is metallic conductivity.
the static charge. From a dierent point of view, static charge is created by
friction; the antistat acts as a surface lubricant, reducing friction and
therefore reducing the buildup of a static charge.
5.9.2. Commercial Antistats
Quaternary ammonium soaps, R 4N + X , have the most powerful antistatic
action. Unfortunately, they tend to decompose in high-temperature
processing, so they are sometimes post-applied as a 1 to 2 percent solution.
They also encounter objections from the FDA.
Ethoxylated amines, RNH(CH 2CH 2O) nH, approach quaternary ammonium
soaps, both in eectiveness and in problems.
Ethoxylated esters, RCO 2(CH 2CH 2) nOH, are the most widely used class. By
balancing the organic acid portion (R) against the polyoxyethylene portion, it
is possible to control polarity and therefore semicompatibility and rate of
migration to the surface of the plastic, thus making it self-renewable over the
lifetime of the product. They adsorb water to the surface, making it
conductive and lubricating it to reduce friction. They are usually non-toxic
and stable enough for melt processing. Ethoxylated alcohols, RO(CH 2CH 2O)
nH,
Dust attraction is the oldest and crudest method. The technician rubs the
plastic sample against his clothing, and then lowers it toward a dish of dust,
and notes the height at which the dust jumps up to the charged plastic. A
more sophisticated test uses a sooty ame to deposit soot on the plastic, and
then measures the amount of soot collected.
5.9.4.2. S URFACE CONDUCTIVITY.
Determining the surface conductivity of the plastic sample is a popular,
simple measurement that is often assumed to correlate with antistatic
behavior. Practical proof would be more reassuring.
5.9.4.3. ELECTROSTATIC DECAY.
A high static charge is applied to the sample electrically. Then the rate of
decay is measured instrumentally.
In all these methods, relative humidity is the most treacherous variable that
must be considered. This can produce a 10
While they are dicult to make, ship, store, and handle, the radicals they
produce are very useful in vinyl free-radical polymerization, cure of
unsaturated polyesters, cross-linking of thermoplastics, grafting, and
polyesters.
5.10.1.4. DIALKYL PEROXIDES.
These are typically high-temperature materials.
Dicumyl peroxide (dicup or DCP) (104C) is useful in cross-linking LDPE,
EVA, EPR, and EPDM.
Di-t-butyl peroxide (125C) is useful for the high-temperature nish of
styrene polymerization to reduce residual styrene monomer content and
thus improve modulus, HDT, taste, and odor.
5.10.1.5. HYDROPEROXIDES.
Hydroperoxides such as cumene hydroperoxide are used primarily for lowtemperature emulsion polymerization of butadiene to make cold rubber.
3 CO 3 H).
This is used mainly in epoxidizing olens such as soybean oil for vinyl
stabilizers and in synthesis of aliphatic epoxy resins.
5.10.1.7. PEROXYKETALS.
These are particularly popular for cure of BMC and SMC unsaturated
polyesters.
5.10.1.8. PEROXYDICARBONATES.
These are the least stable class, often too unstable for shipment, in which
case they must be synthesized where they are going to be used. They have
become the leading initiator for vinyl chloride polymerization.
5.10.1.9. 2,5-DIMETHYL-2,5-DI-T-BUTYL PEROXY HEXYNE-3.
This, having a 10-hr half-life temperature 135C, was developed specically
for the higher temperature processing required in the cross-linking of HDPE.
5.10.2. Safety Precautions
Peroxides are often sold and handled in dilute form to reduce the danger
of explosive reaction.
Heat should be avoided in shipping, storing, and handling. Some must be
kept refrigerated.
Friction should be avoided, both in packaging (no tight-tting or screwed
lids) and in handling and processing.
Organic impurities should not be allowed to contaminate peroxides, as the
attack on them would be exothermic and kick o the entire batch.
Peroxides and catalysts/promoters should never be mixed together in the
pure state. The batch of polymer should be divided in half. Then, the
peroxide is added to one half and the catalysts/promoters to the other half.
In this diluted form, the two halves can then be mixed to start the reaction.
5.10.3. U.S. Market Analysis
Table 5.33 provides an analysis of peroxides used in plastics in the United
States.
Benzoyl peroxide
10
Peroxy esters
Dialkyl peroxides
Others
incompatible .
5.11.3. Interface/Interphase
In multiphase polyblends, a critical factor is the interface between the
phases. If the two polymers reject each other and separate into phases, they
are likely to reject each other at the interface as well. Such a weak interface
will fail under stress, and most properties will suer. Thus, most polymer
blends are practically incompatible. Yet, most successful commercial
polyblends are multiphase systems. This means that there must be a
mechanism to strengthen the interface.
In some cases, the two polymers have some partial miscibility, so the interface
is not a sharp separation of one polymer from the other but, rather, a
modulating solution of the two polymers in each other, oering a gradual
5.11.5.1. TYPE I.
If the two polymers are completely miscible down to the molecular level and
form a single homogeneous phase, properties are generally proportional to
the ratio of the two polymers in the blend. Even if the two polymers are
immiscible and form ne phase separation, many property tests are relatively
insensitive to ne-phase separation and may still show such homogeneous
behavior. Practically, this is useful to compounders who want the ability to
produce a spectrum of balance of properties at low cost.
5.11.5.2. TYPE II.
When two polymers are immiscible and form two separate phases, the major
polymer will form the continuous matrix phase and retain most of its original
properties, while the minor polymer will form nely dispersed domains and
contribute certain specic properties. Thus, high A/B ratios will have
properties similar to poly-A, and high B/A ratios will have properties similar to
poly-B. Obviously, at fairly equal ratios of A and B, there will be a phase
inversion with a rapid change of properties from one plateau to the other.
This explains the two leading uses of polymer blends. (1) When rigid plastics
suer from brittleness, dispersion of ne rubbery domains in the rigid matrix
can add great impact strength with little sacrice of rigidity. (2) Rubber
molecules must be tied together to give them strength, creep resistance, and
insolubility; while this is usually done by thermoset vulcanization, it can also
be done by dispersion of ne rigid thermoplastic domains, either glassy or
crystalline, to form thermoplastic elastomers.
VS.
TEMPERATURE.
its impact strength. Recent news releases suggest that this technique is
also being applied to other engineering thermoplastics.
an immiscible polymer.
OF
OF
EPOXY RESINS.
Humidity eliminators are used to absorb moisture from PVC plastisols and
other liquid systems, to prevent blistering, bubbles, and craters. A typical
system would be a combination of calcium oxide plus a wetting agent.
Antifoam agents are added to latexes to prevent air from producing foam
that would ruin the dried nal coatings. Typical antifoams are octyl alcohol
and liquid silicones. They must be chosen with care to avoid negative
eects on adhesion and decoration of the nished products.
5.12.4. Oxygen Scavengers
These may be added to PET bottle resins to protect the contents against
attack by atmospheric oxygen. They are mostly proprietary.
5.12.5. Epoxy Diluents
When an epoxy resin formulation is too viscous for the intended process, it
may be thinned by adding low-molecular-weight liquids. These are preferably
mono- or diepoxy monomers, smaller than conventional bisphenol epoxy
molecules, which can react right into the nished resin without sacrice of
properties. Some formulators may use nonreactive diluents, but these may
detract from nished properties.
5.12.6. Fragrances
Chemical fragrances are added to products either to produce a desired odor
(decorative) or to mask an undesirable odor (functional) in a material or
an environment. They are generally perfume oils that are masterbatched into
thermoplastics, often combined with colorant and sold in powder or
pelletized form to processors who blend the masterbatch with natural resin
in conventional molding, extrusion, and foam processes.
They may be used at concentrations from 10 ppm (0.001 percent) (food
packaging lm) up to 40 percent (air fresheners). The concentrates are sold
at $2 to $8 per pound.
Lifetime of the odor is controlled by vapor pressure of the odorant,
surface/volume ratio of the product, temperature, and controlled air ow.
Lifetimes may range from several days to many years. Shelf life, properly
packaged, is almost innite.
Major developed uses are in garbage bags, lms in general, room and auto
air fresheners, toys, and housewares. Developing markets include textiles,
hospital supplies, consumer packaging to stimulate sales, wall tile, air
conditioning, and enhancement of work eciency. In most of these uses, the
odor is perfectly apparent. However, in some uses, it is kept at a subliminal
level for subtle psychological eect.
5.12.7. Masterbatches
Compounders are always free to buy individual additives and combine them
to their specic needs. In some cases, particularly when the additive is
dicult to compound, it is best masterbatched by specialists and then sold to
the processor who simply lets it down with natural. Many processors prefer
not to become involved in the chemical details and buy combined
masterbatches containing several additives all together in the same
masterbatch. This is particularly common in stabilizer packages, surfacetreated llers and bers, lubricant packages, colorants + odorants,
polyblends, and antifog/antistat/lubricant additives. While this saves the
processor a lot of detail formulating eort, it makes it much more dicult for
him to identify and solve problems when the compound does not perform
properly.
, Van
, Wiley-
Interscience 1970.
[6.] J. V. Milewski and H. S. Katz, Handbook of Reinforcements for Plastics