Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Styrenic ion exchange resins

A number of important commercial resins are manufactured by suspension polymerization, including poly(vinyl chloride) and copolymers, styrene resins [general purpose polystyrene, EPS, high impact polystyrene (HIPS), poly(styrene-acrylonitrile) (SAN), poly(acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene) (ABS), styrenic ion-exchange resins], poly(methyl methacrylate) and copolymers, and poly(vinyl acetate). However, some of these polymers rather use a mass-suspension process, in which the polymerization starts as a bulk one and, at certain conversion, water and suspending agents are added to the reactor to form a suspension and continue the polymerization in this way up to high conversions. No continuous suspension polymerization process is known to be employed on a... [Pg.306]

Styrene ion-exchange resins, which are used in the nuclear industry [29]. It is argued that the destruction of pulp mill sludges from paper manufacture by supercritical water oxidation is now an economic proposition [12]. These sludges contain dioxins and furans and therefore have high land-fill costs. [Pg.519]


See other pages where Styrenic ion exchange resins is mentioned: [Pg.120]    [Pg.5417]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.25 , Pg.28 ]




SEARCH



Characteristics of Styrene-Divinylbenzene Ion Exchange Resins as Catalyst

Ion exchangers resins

Ion resin

Ion-exchange resins

Ion-exchanged resins

Resin ion-exchange resins

Styrenic resins

© 2024 chempedia.info