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Acrylic acid particulate

Some acrylic acid copolymers are promoted as having a very wide range of functions that permit them to act as calcium phosphate DCAs, barium sulfate antiprecipitants, particulate iron oxides dispersants, and colloidal iron stabilizers. One such popular copolymer is acrylic acid/sulfonic acid (or acrylic acid/ 2-acrylamido-methylpropane sulfonic acid, AA/SA, AA/AMPS). Examples of this chemistry include Acumer 2000 (4,500 MW) 2100 (11,000 MW) Belclene 400, Acrysol QR-1086, TRC -233, and Polycol 43. [Pg.447]

Acrylic acid terpolymers have appeared on the market in recent years. With their broad spectrum of functions, they offer the potential for excellent waterside conditions. In particular, the terpolymers have proved to be very effective particulate iron oxides dispersants and colloidal iron stabilizers. Examples include acrylic acid/sulfonic acid/sodium styrene sulfonate (AA/SA/SSS), such as Good-Rite K781, K797, K798. A further example is acrylic acid/ sulfonic acid/substituted acrylamide (AA/SA/NI), such as Acumer 3100. [Pg.447]

PCA 16 is available as Beldene 161/164 (50/35% w/w solids), Acumer 4161 (50%), and Polysperse (50%). These are low-phosphorus content materials that have found application in boiler FW formulations because of excellent sludge conditioning and particulate dispersion properties. The number 16 represents a 16 1 w/w ratio of acrylic acid and sodium hypophosphite, giving PCA 16 a MW range of 3,300 to 3,900. PCA 16 is particularly effective for the control of calcium carbonate and sulfate deposition. It is usually incorporated with other polymers in formulations and is approved for use under U.S. CFR 21, 173.310. [Pg.452]

Polycarbonate urethane having poly(acrylic acid) functional groups Highly porous scaffold fabricated by pressure differential solvent casting — particulate leaching Dubey et al. (2011)... [Pg.200]

When a water-miscible polymer is to be made via a suspension process, the continuous phase is a water-immiscible fluid, often a hydrocarbon. In such circumstances the adjective inverse is often used to identify the process [118]. The drop phase is often an aqueous monomer solution which contains a water-soluble initiator. Inverse processes that produce very small polymer particles are sometimes referred to as inverse emulsion polymerization but that is often a misnomer because the polymerization mechanism is not always analogous to conventional emulsion polymerization. A more accurate expression is either inverse microsuspension or inverse dispersion polymerization. Here, as with conventional suspension polymerization, the polymerization reaction occurs inside the monomer-containing drops. The drop stabilizers are initially dispersed in the continuous (nonaqueous phase). If particulate solids are used for drop stabilization, the surfaces of the small particles must be rendered hydrophobic. Inverse dispersion polymerization is used to make water-soluble polymers and copolymers from monomers such as acrylic acid, acylamide, and methacrylic acid. These polymers are used in water treatment and as thickening agents for textile applications. Beads of polysaccharides can also be made in inverse suspensions but, in those cases, the polymers are usually preformed before the suspension is created. Physical changes, rather than polymerization reactions, occur in the drops. Conventional stirred reactors are usually used for inverse suspension polymerization and the drop size distribution can be fairly wide. However, Ni et al. [119] found that good control of DSD and PSD could be achieved in the inverse-phase suspension polymerization of acrylamide by using an oscillatory baffled reactor. [Pg.239]

The substrate must be clean and free from particulate matter. Adhesion to acrylic plastics is normally excellent. We have found that the combination of isopropanol and acetic acid will gently attack and swell a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) surface and is more aggressive as the molecular weight of the PMMA is decreased. Excellent adhesion to polycarbonate can be obtained by heating the polycarbonate for two hours at 125°C before the coating is applied. [Pg.131]


See other pages where Acrylic acid particulate is mentioned: [Pg.105]    [Pg.4520]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.1184]    [Pg.585]    [Pg.377]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.2605]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.602]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.554]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.147]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.279 ]




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