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Polymer blends with chlorinated polystyrene

PVC can be blended with numerous other polymers to give it better processability and impact resistance. For the manufacture of food contact materials the following polymerizates and/or polymer mixtures from polymers manufactured from the above mentioned starting materials can be used Chlorinated polyolefins blends of styrene and graft copolymers and mixtures of polystyrene with polymerisate blends butadiene-acrylonitrile-copolymer blends (hard rubber) blends of ethylene and propylene, butylene, vinyl ester, and unsaturated aliphatic acids as well as salts and esters plasticizerfrec blends of methacrylic acid esters and acrylic acid esters with monofunctional saturated alcohols (Ci-C18) as well as blends of the esters of methacrylic acid butadiene and styrene as well as polymer blends of acrylic acid butyl ester and vinylpyrrolidone polyurethane manufactured from 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate, 1.4-butandiol and aliphatic polyesters from adipic acid and glycols. [Pg.31]

In the case of polystyrene blends with poly(vinyl methyl ether) two phase behaviour was found for blends from various chlorinated solvents whereas single phase behaviour was found for blends from toluene The phase separation of mixtures of these polymers in various solvents has been studied and the interaction parameters of the two polymers with the solvents measured by inverse gas chromatography It was found that those solvents which induced phase separation were those for which a large difference existed between the two separate polymer-solvent interaction parameters. This has been called the A% effect (where A% = X 2 Xi 3)-A two phase region exists within the polymer/polymer/solvent three component phase diagram as shown in Fig. 2. When a dilute solution at composition A is evaporated, phase separation takes place at B and when the system leaves the two phase region, at overall... [Pg.130]

As reported by Diehl et al. [58], interpolymers are also compatible with a broader range of polymers, including styrene block copolymers [59], poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC)-based polymers [60], poly(phenylene ethers) [61] and olefinic polymers such as ethylene-acrylic acid copolymer, ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer and chlorinated polyethylene. Owing to their unique molecular structure, specific ESI have been demonstrated as effective blend compatibilizers for polystyrene-polyethylene blends [62,63]. The development of the miscibility/ compatibility behavior of ESI-ESI blends differing in styrene content will be highlighted below. [Pg.617]

Specifically, PVC blends with polyethylene, polypropylene, or polystyrene could offer significant potential. PVC offers rigidity combined with flammability resistance. In essence, PVC offers the promise to be the lowest cost method to flame retard these polymers. The processing temperatures for the polyolefins and polystyrene are within the critical range for PVC. In fact, addition of the polyolefins to PVC should enhance its ability to be extruded and injected molded. PVC has been utilized in blends with functional styrenics (ABS and styrene-maleic anhydride co-and terpolymers) as well as PMMA offering the key advantage of improved flame resistance. Reactive extrusion concepts applied to PVC blends with polyolefins and polystyrene appear to be a facile method for compatibilization should the proper chemical modifications be found. He et al. [1997] noted the use of solid-state chlorinated polyethylene as a compatibilizer for PVC/LLDPE blends with a significant improvement in mechanical properties. A recent treatise [Datta and Lohse,... [Pg.1172]

On the other hand, some mechanically compatible blends as well as some dispersed two-phase systems have made respectable inroads into the commercial scene. Many of these are blends of low-impact resins with high-impact elastomeric polymers examples are polystyrene/rubber, poly (styrene-co-acrylonitrile) /rubber, poly (methyl methacrylate) /rubber, poly (ethylene propylene)/propylene rubber, and bis-A polycarbonate/ ABS as well as blends of polyvinyl chloride with ABS or PMMA or chlorinated polyethylene. [Pg.550]

In practice, the existence of both UCST and LCST has been established for polymer-solvent systems. About 10 years ago, Schmitt discussed UCST, LCST and combined UCST and LCST behavior in blends of poly(methyl methacrylate) with poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (PMMA-PSAN), Ueda and Karasz reported the existence of UCST in chlorinated polyethylene (CPE) blends using DSC, Inoue found that elastomer blends of cis-l,4-polybutadiene and poly(styrene-co-butadiene) exhibit both UCST and LCST behavior and Cong et al. (72) observed that blends of polystyrene and carboxylated poly(2,6-dimethyl-l,4-phenylene oxide) copolymers with a degree of carboxylation between molar fraction 8% and 10% exhibit both UCST and LCST behavior. They used DSC to establish the phase diagram. [Pg.99]

Blends of polystyrene with cis-1,4-polyisoprene and poly(vinyl chloride) have also been examined. In the former case the volatile products arising from thermal degradation of the blend were the same as those from the constituent polymers. In the latter case the degradation products varied because of the chlorination of the polystyrene by chlorine radicals. [Pg.311]

Some measurements of this property have been made in a range of electrically conducting polymers. These include epoxy resin/polyaniline-dodecylbenzene sulfonic acid blends [38], polystyrene-black polyphenylene oxide copolymers [38], semiconductor-based polypyrroles [33], titanocene polyesters [40], boron-containing polyvinyl alcohol [41], copper-filled epoxy resin [42], polyethylidene dioxy thiophene-polystyrene sulfonate, polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene oxide [43], polycarbonate/acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene composites [44], polyethylene oxide complexes with sodium lanthanum tetra-fluoride [45], chlorine-substituted polyaniline [46], polyvinyl pyrolidine-polyvinyl alcohol coupled with potassium bromate tetrafluoromethane sulfonamide [47], doped polystyrene block polyethylene [38, 39], polypyrrole [48], polyaniline-polyamide composites [49], and polydimethyl siloxane-polypyrrole composites [50]. [Pg.135]


See other pages where Polymer blends with chlorinated polystyrene is mentioned: [Pg.134]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.260]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.457]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.439]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.32 ]




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