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Acrylic monomers Adiponitrile

Acrylonitrile is a monomer used in high volume principally in the manufacture of acrylic fibres, resins (acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene, styrene-acrylonitrile and others) and nitrile rubbers (butadiene-acrylonitrile). Other important uses are as an intermediate in the preparation of adiponitrile (for nylon 6/6) and acrylamide and, in the past, as a fumigant. Occupational exposures to acrylonitrile occur in its production and use in the preparation of fibres, resins and other products. It is present in cigarette smoke and has been detected rarely and at low levels in ambient air and water. [Pg.90]

Acrylonitrile resembles VC, a carcinogen, in structure. It is a flammable, explosive liquid (b.p. 77 C, V.P. 80 mm at 20°C). AN is a component of acrylic and modacrylic fibers produced by copolymerization with other monomers, e.g., with methyl acrylate, Me-methacrylate, vinyl acetate, VC and VDC. Other major uses of AN include copolymerizations with butadiene and styrene to produce ABS polymers, and with styrene to yield SAN resins which are used in the manufacture of plastics. Nitrile elastomers and latexes are also made with AN, as are a number of other chemicals, e.g. acrylamide and adiponitrile. Acrylonitrile is also used as a fumigant. [Pg.377]

Use Monomer for acrylic and modacrylic fibers and high-strength whiskers ABS and acrylonitrile styrene copolymers nitrile rubber cyanoethylation of cotton synthetic soil blocks (acrylonitrile polymerized in wood pulp) organic synthesis adiponitrile grain fumigant monomer for a semiconductive polymer that can be used like inorganic oxide catalysts in dehydrogenation of tert-butanol to isobutylene and water. [Pg.21]

Acrylonitrile is currently the second largest outlet for propylene (after polypropylene). It is used as a monomer for synthetic fibers and acrylic plastics (thermoplastics and food packaging mainly), AS (acrylonitrile-styrene) resins, and ABS (aerylonitrile-butadiene-styrene) thermoplastics, as well as in the synthesis of acrylamide, adiponitrile, and nitrile elastomers. The manufacture of acrylonitrile is exclusively based on the one-step propylene ammoxidation process. Originally developed by Sohio, Standard Oil Company (now part of BP America), the conventional method used since 1957 employs a fluidized-bed reactor and multicomponent catalysts based on Mo-containing mixed-metal oxides. Over the years, the industrial... [Pg.796]

Acrylonitrile is used as a feedstock to make acrylic fibers in the textile industry. Acrylonitrile is an important monomer used in the polymerization of ABS plastics. ACN is an important feedstock for adiponitrile (ADN) and acrylamide. [Pg.382]


See other pages where Acrylic monomers Adiponitrile is mentioned: [Pg.233]    [Pg.1079]    [Pg.2085]    [Pg.214]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.9 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.9 ]




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Acrylic monomer

Adiponitrile

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