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The leading PVC film manufacturer in India Caprihans India Limited is one of the largest manufacturers of PVC Films in India and has got expertise of more than 35 years in this field. It manufacturers a wide variety of PVC films both Flexible & Rigid and also Sheets/Boards made from other polymers like ABS, PP, HDPE and Rigid PVC. The films are calendared while the sheets/Boards are extruded. Caprihans India Limited is a Public Limited company and became a part of EVC group in 1997. EVC was acquired by the INEOS group in 2001. The INEOS Films business was acquired by Bilcare in 2010. Caprihans India Limited is today part of Bilcares Solutions Division . The company has 4 calendaring lines, 3 extruder lines, 2 lamination and coating lines as also printing and embossing lines at its production units at Thane and Nasik, near Mumbai. A series of computerized in-process controls ensures a high level of quality products to our customers. This along with continuous modernization and know-how exchange with Bilcare Research group companies ensures that our customers get expert application support backed by experience and expertise of multi disciplinary teams. The entire organization is focused towards customer satisfaction. This is ensured by an extensive network of branches and warehouses spread out at different geographical locations all over India and through agents in other countries.

About Bilcare Research Bilcare Research is an innovation-led solutions provider that partners with the global pharmaceutical and healthcare industry to improve patient healthcare outcomes. We endeavour to deliver effective and affordable solutions that enhance the speed and quality of drug discovery and help build and protect brands by ensuring the delivery of genuine medicines to patients.

PVC The most widely used polymer in medical applications


Administrator User 19/08/2008 7:21 pm

PVC is a versatile plastic that has been used for medical applications for more than 50 years. It has passed many critical tests and gained acceptance by health regulators world-wide and is now the most widely used polymer in pre-sterilised single use medical applications. Various medical applications are made from, or contain PVC, including:

Containers for blood, urine continence and ostomy products Containers for intravenous solution giving sets Heart and lung bypass sets Catheters and cannulae Tubing for dialysis, endotracheal, feeding and pressure monitoring Surgical and examination gloves Inflatable splints Inhalation masks Blister packs for pills and tablets.

What is PVC?
Administrator User 11/08/2008 5:02 pm

Plastics are also called synthetic resins and are broadly classified into two categories; thermosetting resins and thermoplastic resins. The thermosetting resins include phenolic resin and melamine resin, which are thermally hardened and never become soft again. Thermoplastic resins include PVC, polyethylene (PE), polystyrene (PS) and polypropylene (PP), which can be re-softened by heating.

Main synthetic resins and their raw materials chart

Usually, thermoplastics are supplied in the form of pelletised material (compounds) with additives (antioxidants, etc.) already blended in it. However, PVC resin is often supplied in powder form and long term storage is possible since the material is resistant to oxidation and degradation. Various additives and pigments are added to PVC during the processing stage, and the blend is then converted into PVC products. PVC is sometimes known as Vinyl in Europe and predominantly so in North America. In Europe, Vinyl usually refers to certain specific flexible applications, such as flooring, decorative sheets and artificial leather.

PVC is a thermoplastic made of 57% chlorine (derived from industrial grade salt) and 43% carbon (derived predominantly from oil / gas via ethylene). It is less dependent than other polymers on crude oil or natural gas, which are nonrenewable, and hence can be regarded as a natural resource saving plastic, in contrast to plastics such as PE, PP, PET and PS, which are totally dependent on oil or gas. This chlorine gives to PVC excellent fire resistance: when PVC is set on fire, the flames go out as the fire source is removed due to the materials self-extinguishing properties.

How is PVC made?


Administrator User 19/08/2008 11:12 am

The chemical process for making PVC involves taking the simplest unit, called the monomer, and linking these monomer molecules together in the polymerisation process. Long molecular chains are formed called polymers (which are also called macromolecules). This is the case for PVC, which is made from vinyl chloride monomer known usually by its initials VCM through polymerisation. Some monomers exist in the form of reactive gaseous chemical substances, and some of these may cause health hazards when in direct contact with humans. In these cases they are manufactured and processed under strict control for health, safety and environmental protection. On the other hand, polymers such as PVC, which are manufactured from monomers through polymerisation, are solid and chemically stable substances, therefore do not affect human health. VCM, which is the raw material for PVC, is a gas at ambient temperature but is usually stored in liquid form under pressure. Ethylene and chlorine are raw materials for PVC. Upstream industries are those that provide these materials and include producers of basic petrochemicals (sometimes known as feedstocks), which supply ethylene, and the chlor-alkali (caustic soda) industry, which supplies chlorine.

By thermal cracking of naphtha or natural gas, the basic petrochemical industry manufactures ethylene and propylene, etc. Naphtha is mainly supplied from the petroleum refinery industry, which uses crude oil as raw material. The chlor-alkali industry produces caustic soda, chlorine and hydrogen via electrolysis using industrial grade salt as main raw material. At a first stage in the PVC production process ethylene and chlorine are combined to produce an intermediate product called ethylene dichloride; this is then transformed into vinyl chloride, the basic building block of polyvinyl chloride or PVC. The process of `polymerisation' links together the vinyl chloride molecules to form chains of PVC. The PVC produced in this way is in the form of a white powder. This is not used alone, but blended with other ingredients to give formulations for a wide range of products. Most commodity plastics have carbon and hydrogen as their main component elements. PVC differs by containing chlorine (around 57 per cent by weight) as well as carbon and hydrogen. The presence of chlorine in the molecule makes PVC particularly versatile because it makes it compatible with a wide range of other materials. The chlorine content also helps to make PVC flame retardant. It can also be used as a `marker' to distinguish PVC in automatic sorting systems for plastics recycling. PVC formulations can be shaped by a variety of techniques and, using very little energy, made into the final product form. PVC polymer is chemically stable, neutral and non-toxic. PVC formulations have a wide range of applications including the most sensitive, such as medical equipment, plus construction, automotive and electrical cabling.

How is PVC Used


Administrator User 19/08/2008 11:15 am

PVC is one of the most used plastic materials in the world. At global level, demand for PVC exceeds 35 million tonnes per annum and it is in constant growth (+5% on global average), with higher growth rates in the developing countries. In Europe (EU-27), the production of PVC products including exports totals about 8 million tonnes per year. European PVC resin consumption totals some 6.5 million tonnes per year, or 15% of all plastics use in Europe, with an average growth of 2-3% per year.

PVC sales in Western Europe and Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia in 2007

PVC is a more economic material PVC products make life safer, more comfortable and more pleasurable. And, because PVC has an excellent ratio of economic cost to performance, it allows people of all income levels access to these important benefits. The diversity of PVC applications challenges the imagination. In everyday life, they are all around us, from construction profiles to medical devices, from roofing membranes to credit cards, from childrens toys to pipes for water and gas. Few other materials are as versatile or able to fulfil such demanding specifications. In this way, PVC facilitates creativity and innovation, making new possibilities. PVC underpins safety Wire and cables sheathed with PVC prevent potentially fatal electrical accidents. In hospitals around the world PVC medical tubing which does not break or kink delivers fluids and medicines to the sick. Car components which use very strong PVC can reduce the risk of any injuries being caused in case of an accident. Most PVC products are long lasting up to and over 60 years. These applications are reliable throughout their service lives and cut down vastly on maintenance or repair. Modern cars, for example, last many years longer simply because PVC protects the underside from water and corrosion. PVC enhances our lives Functional performance is by no means the whole story. PVC has a distinguished role in beauty and aesthetics. In fashion, furniture and all types of indoor and outdoor accessories, PVC opens up functional and design opportunities that are both visually striking and fundamentally practical. In short, people everywhere benefit from this material. Sometimes invisible but always reliable, PVC products make the difference when it counts.

PVC in Packaging
Administrator User 20/08/2008 3:47 pm

Several simple properties have made PVC invaluable as one of the key plastics used in modern day packaging to protect and preserve products. It is flexible, light, cost-effective, transparent, tough and safe. PVC requires less fuel to manufacture and transport when compared with other packaging materials such as metal or glass, and protects against contamination by helping to prevent the spread of germs during manufacture, distribution and display, particularly in the form of cling film. This prevents unnecessary wastage as it ensures food lasts longer. Approximately 500,000 tons of PVC is used in packaging across Europe each year. Its major packaging applications are rigid film (about 60 %), flexible film such as cling film (11 per cent) and closures (3 per cent). PVC provides a very versatile and cost-efficient material for the production of:

Blisters and presentation trays Toiletries Toothpaste Tubes Salad Packs Bottle Sleeving Mobile Phone Accessories Cash Containers

Polyvinyl chloride
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search "PVC" redirects here. For other uses, see PVC (disambiguation).

Polyvinyl chloride
Elongation at break Notch test 20-40% 2-5 kJ/m2

Glass temperature Melting point Effective heat of combustion Specific heat (c) Water absorption (ASTM)

82 C[1] 100260 C[1] 17.95 MJ/kg 0.9 kJ/(kgK) 0.04-0.4

Polyvinyl chloride, commonly abbreviated PVC, is a thermoplastic polymer. It is a vinyl polymer constructed of repeating vinyl groups (ethenyls) having one hydrogen replaced by chloride. Polyvinyl chloride is the third most widely produced plastic, after polyethylene and polypropylene.[2] PVC is widely used in construction because it is cheap, durable, and easy to assemble. PVC production is expected to exceed 40 million tons by 2016.[3] According to IUPAC, polyvinyl chloride should be named poly(chloroethanediyl), but the name is not used. It can be made softer and more flexible by the addition of plasticizers, the most widely used being phthalates. In this form, it is used in clothing and upholstery, electrical cable insulation, inflatable products and many other applications in which it would originally have replaced rubber.[4] PVC is a controversial material in that during its production, useful life and incineration, especially in accidental and uncontrolled circumstances, it may liberate persistent toxins (see section 5), which the manufacture, use and destruction of suitable alternative plastics such as polypropylene do not.

Contents
[hide]

1 Preparation 2 Properties 3 History 4 Applications

o o o o o o o o o o o o

4.1 Clothing 4.2 Electric wires 4.3 Pipes 4.4 Portable electronic accessories 4.5 Signs 4.6 Joining 4.7 Ceiling tiles 4.8 Unplasticized polyvinyl chloride (uPVC) 5.1 Phthalate plasticizers 5.2 Vinyl chloride monomer 5.3 Dioxins 5.4 Bans

5 Health and safety

6 Recycling 7 See also 8 References

8.1 Bibliography

9 External links

[edit] Preparation

The repeating unit of polyvinyl chloride

Space-filling model of a part of a PVC chain


Polyvinyl chloride is produced by polymerization of the vinyl chloride monomer (VCM), as shown.[5] About 57% of its mass is chlorine.

By far the most widely used production process is suspension polymerization. In this process, VCM and water are introduced into the polymerization reactor and a polymerization initiator, along with other chemical additives, are added to initiate the polymerization reaction. The contents of the reaction vessel are continually mixed to maintain the suspension and ensure a uniform particle size of the PVC resin. The reaction is exothermic, and thus requires a cooling mechanism to maintain the reactor contents at the appropriate temperature. As the volumes also contract during the reaction (PVC is denser than VCM), water is continually added to the mixture to maintain the suspension. Once the reaction has run its course, the resulting PVC slurry is degassed and stripped to remove excess VCM (which is recycled) then passed though a centrifuge to remove water. The slurry is further dried in a hot air bed, and the resulting powder sieved before storage or pelletization. Normally, the resulting PVC has a VCM content of less than 1 part per million. Other production processes, such as micro-suspension polymerization and emulsion polymerization, produce PVC with smaller particle sizes (10 m vs. 120-150 m for suspension PVC) with slightly different properties and with somewhat different sets of applications. The product of the polymerization process is unmodified PVC. Before PVC can be made into finished products, it almost always requires conversion into a compound by the incorporation of additives such as heat stabilizers, UV stabilizers, lubricants, plasticizers, processing aids, impact modifiers, thermal modifiers, fillers, flame retardants, biocides, blowing agents and smoke suppressors, and, optionally pigments.[6]

[edit] Properties
The properties for PVC are usually categorized based on rigid and flexible PVCs.

Rigid PVC Flexible PVC 1.31.45 1.11.35 Thermal conductivity [W/(mK)][8] 0.140.28 0.140.17 [7] Yield strength [MPa] 3160 1025 [9] Young's modulus [psi] 490,000 Flexural strength (yield) [psi] 10,500[9] Compression strength [psi] 9500[9] 5 Coefficient of thermal expansion (linear) [mm/(mm C)] 510 [9] Vicat B [C][8] 65100 Not recommended 16 [10][11] Resistivity [ m] 10 10121015 Surface resistivity [][10][11] 10131014 10111012
Density

Property

[g/cm3][7]

[edit] History
PVC was accidentally discovered at least twice in the 19th century, first in 1835 by Henri Victor Regnault and in 1872 by Eugen Baumann. On both occasions the polymer appeared as a white solid inside flasks of vinyl chloride that had been left exposed to sunlight. In the early 20th century the Russian chemist Ivan Ostromislensky and Fritz Klatte of the German chemical company Griesheim-Elektron both attempted to use PVC (polyvinyl chloride) in commercial products, but difficulties in processing the rigid, sometimes brittle polymer blocked their efforts. Waldo Semon and the B.F. Goodrich Company developed a method in 1926 to plasticize PVC by blending it with various additives. The result was a more flexible and more easily processed material that soon achieved widespread commercial use.

[edit] Applications
A number of PVC's properties recommend it for a wide variety of applications. It is biologically and chemically resistant, making it the plastic of choice for most household sewerage pipes and other pipe applications where corrosion would limit the use of metal. With the addition of impact modifiers and stabilizers, it becomes a popular material for window and door frames. By adding plasticizers, it can become flexible enough to be used in cabling applications as a wire insulator. It is also used to make vinyl records.

[edit] Clothing
PVC has become widely used in clothing, to either create a leather-like material or at times simply for the effect of PVC. PVC clothing is common in Goth, Punk and alternative fashions. PVC is cheaper than rubber, leather, and latex and so it is more widely available and worn. PVC fabric has a sheen to it and is waterproof. It is commonly used in coats, skiing equipment, shoes, jackets, aprons, and bags because of this.

[edit] Electric wires


PVC is commonly used as the insulation on electric wires; the plastic used for this purpose needs to be plasticized. In a fire, PVC-coated wires can form HCl fumes; the chlorine serves to scavenge free radicals and is the source of the material's fire retardance. While HCl fumes can also pose a health hazard in their own right, HCl dissolves in moisture and breaks down onto surfaces, particularly in areas where the air is cool enough to breathe, and is not available for inhalation.[12] Frequently in applications where smoke is a major hazard (notably in tunnels and communal areas) PVC-free cable insulation is preferred, such as low smoke zero halogen (LSZH) insulation.

[edit] Pipes

PVC pipes in use with intumescent firestops at Nortown Casitas, North York, Ontario.
Roughly half of the world's polyvinyl chloride resin manufactured annually is used for producing pipes for various municipal and industrial applications.[13] In the water distribution market it accounts for 66% of the market in the US, and in sanitary sewer pipe applications, it accounts for 75%.[14] Its light weight, high strength, and low reactivity make it particularly well-suited to this purpose. In addition, PVC pipes can be fused together using various solvent cements, or heat-fused (butt-fusion process, similar to joining HDPE pipe), creating permanent joints that are virtually impervious to leakage. In February, 2007 the California Building Standards Code was updated to approve the use of chlorinated polyvinyl chloride (CPVC) pipe for use in residential water supply piping systems. CPVC has been a nationally accepted material in the US since 1982; California, however, has permitted only limited use since 2001. The Department of Housing and Community Development prepared and certified an Environmental Impact Report resulting in a recommendation that the Commission adopt and approve the use of CPVC. The Commission's vote was unanimous and CPVC has been placed in the 2007 California Plumbing Code. In the United States and Canada, PVC pipes account for the largest majority of pipe materials used in buried municipal applications for drinking water distribution and wastewater mains.[15]

[edit] Portable electronic accessories


PVC is finding increased use as a composite for the production of accessories or housings for portable electronics. Through a fusing process, it can adopt cleaning properties possessed by materials such as wool or cotton which can absorb dust particles and bacteria.[citation needed]

[edit] Signs
Polyvinyl chloride is formed in flat sheets in a variety of thicknesses and colors. As flat sheets, PVC is often expanded to create voids in the interior of the material, providing additional thickness without additional weight and minimal extra cost (see Closedcell PVC foamboard). Sheets are cut using saw and rotary cutting equipment. Plasticized PVC is also used to produce thin, colored, or clear, adhesive-backed films referred to simply as vinyl. These films are typically cut on a computer-controlled plotter or printed in a wide-format printer. These sheets and films are used to produce a wide variety of commercial signage products and markings on vehicles, e.g. car body stripes.

[edit] Joining
PVC Cements are available at plumbing supply houses. The cement softens the material to a gel state until the adhesive layer cures. This has another practical application of being able to hand-machine with a razor blade the PVC pipe to change the wall thickness to allow assembly of nonstandard radius arc segments of electrical conduit large radius elbows. Buried PVC pipes in both water and sanitary sewer applications that are 4-inches in diameter and larger are typically joined by means of a gasketsealed joint. In gasket-sealed jointing systems, an elastomeric gasket is seated in a groove within the bell (female end of pipe). When the spigot (male end) of the adjoining pipe is inserted into the bell, the gasket forms a positive seal that prevents leakage of fluid within the pipe and also keeps water and other contaminants from surrounding soils from entering the piping system. The most common type of gasket utilized in North America is a metal reinforced elastomer, commonly referred to as a Reiber sealing system.[16]

[edit] Ceiling tiles


PVC Ceiling Tiles are an alternative ceiling tiles that are easy to install over any flat surface. They can be glued onto an existing ceiling with a reasonably flat surface.

[edit] Unplasticized polyvinyl chloride (uPVC)

Modern "Tudorbethan" house with uPVC gutters and downpipes, fascia, decorative imitation "half-timbering", windows, and doors
uPVC or Rigid PVC is often used in the building industry as a low-maintenance material, particularly in Ireland, the United Kingdom, and in the United States where it is known as vinyl, or vinyl siding.[17][18] The material comes in a range of colors and finishes, including a photo-effect wood finish, and is used as a substitute for painted wood, mostly for window frames and sills when installing double glazing in new buildings, or to replace older single glazed windows. It has many other uses including fascia, and siding or weatherboarding. The same material has almost entirely replaced the use of cast iron for plumbing and drainage, being used for waste pipes, drainpipes, gutters and downpipes.[19] Due to environmental concerns use of PVC is discouraged by some local authorities in countries such as Germany and the Netherlands.[20][21]

Double glazed Units

[edit] Health and safety


[edit] Phthalate plasticizers
Many vinyl products contain additional chemicals to change the chemical consistency of the product. Some of these additional chemicals called additives can leach out of vinyl products. Plasticizers that must be added to make PVC flexible have been additives of particular concern. Because soft PVC toys have been made for babies for years, there are concerns that these additives leach out of soft toys into the mouths of the children chewing on them. Phthalates mimic human hormones and also affect various life forms including fish and invertebrates adversely. Additionally, adult sex toys have been demonstrated to contain high concentrations of the additives. [22] In January 2006, the European Union placed a ban on six types of phthalate softeners, including DEHP (diethylhexyl phthalate), used in toys.[23] In the U.S. most companies have voluntarily stopped manufacturing PVC toys with DEHP[citation needed] and in 2003 the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) denied a petition for a ban on PVC toys made with an alternative plasticizer, DINP (diisononyl phthalate).[24] In April 2006, the European Chemicals Bureau of the European Commission published an assessment of DINP which found risk "unlikely" for children and newborns.[25]

Vinyl intravenous (IV) bags used in neo-natal intensive care units have also been shown to leach DEHP. In a draft guidance paper published in September 2002, the US FDA recognizes that many medical devices with PVC containing DEHP are not used in ways that result in significant human exposure to the chemical.[26] The FDA, however, suggests that manufacturers consider eliminating DEHP in certain devices that can result in high aggregate exposures for sensitive patient populations such as neonates. Other vinyl products including car interiors, shower curtains, and flooring initially release chemical gases into the air. Some studies indicate that this outgassing of additives may contribute to health complications, and have resulted in a call for banning the use of DEHP on shower curtains, among other uses.[27] The Japanese car companies Toyota, Nissan, and Honda have eliminated PVC in their car interiors starting in 2007. In 2004 a joint Swedish-Danish research team found a statistical association between allergies in children and indoor air levels of DEHP and BBzP (butyl benzyl phthalate), which is used in vinyl flooring.[28] In December 2006, the European Chemicals Bureau of the European Commission released a final draft risk assessment of BBzP which found "no concern" for consumer exposure including exposure to children.[29] In November, 2005 one of the largest hospital networks in the U.S., Catholic Healthcare West, signed a contract with B.Braun for vinyl-free intravenous bags and tubing.[30] According to the Center for Health, Environment & Justice in Falls Church, VA,[31] which helps to coordinate a "precautionary" PVC Campaign,[32] several major corporations including Microsoft, Wal-Mart, and Kaiser Permanente announced efforts to eliminate PVC from products and packaging in 2005.[33] Target is reducing its sale of items with PVC.[34] The FDA Paper titled "Safety Assessment of Di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP)Released from PVC Medical Devices" states that [3.2.1.3] Critically ill or injured patients may be at increased risk of developing adverse health effects from DEHP, not only by virtue of increased exposure, relative to the general population, but also because of the physiological and pharmacodynamic changes that occur in these patients, compared to healthy individuals.[35] In 2008 the European Union's Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks (SCENIHR) reviewed the safety of DEHP in medical devices. The SCENIHR report states that certain medical procedures used in high risk patients result in a significant exposure to DEHP and concludes there is still a reason for having some concerns about the exposure of prematurely born male babies to medical devices containing DEHP.[36] The Committee said there are some alternative plasticizers available for which there is sufficient toxicological data to indicate a lower hazard compared to DEHP but added that the functionality of these plasticizers should be assessed before they can be used as an alternative for DEHP in PVC medical devices.

[edit] Vinyl chloride monomer


In the early 1970s, Dr. John Creech and Dr. Maurice Johnson were the first to clearly link and recognize the carcinogenicity of vinyl chloride monomer to humans when workers in the polyvinyl chloride polymerization section of a B.F. Goodrich plant near Louisville, Kentucky, were diagnosed with liver angiosarcoma also known as hemangiosarcoma, a rare disease.[37] Since that time, studies of PVC workers in Australia, Italy, Germany, and the UK have all associated certain types of occupational cancers with exposure to vinyl chloride. The link between angiosarcoma of the liver and long-term exposure to vinyl chloride is the only one that has been confirmed by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. All the cases of angiosarcoma developed from exposure to vinyl chloride monomer were in workers who were exposed to very high VCM levels, routinely, for many years. These workers cleaned accretions in reactors, a practice that has now been replaced by automated high-pressure water jets. A 1997 U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report concluded that the development and acceptance by the PVC industry of a closed loop polymerization process in the late 1970s "almost completely eliminated worker exposures" and that "new cases of hepatic angiosarcoma in vinyl chloride polymerization workers have been virtually eliminated."[38] According to the EPA, "vinyl chloride emissions from polyvinyl chloride (PVC), ethylene dichloride (EDC), and vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) plants cause or contribute to air pollution that may reasonably be anticipated to result in an increase in mortality or an increase in serious irreversible, or incapacitating reversible illness. Vinyl chloride is a known human carcinogen that causes a rare cancer of the liver."[39] EPA's 2001 updated Toxicological Profile and Summary Health Assessment for VCM in its Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) database lowers EPA's previous risk factor estimate by a factor of 20 and concludes that "because of the consistent evidence for liver cancer in all the studies...and the weaker association for other sites, it is concluded that the liver is the most sensitive site, and protection against liver cancer will protect against possible cancer induction in other tissues."[40]

A 1998 front-page series in the Houston Chronicle claimed the vinyl industry has manipulated vinyl chloride studies to avoid liability for worker exposure and to hide extensive and severe chemical spills into local communities.[41] Retesting of community residents in 2001 by the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) found dioxin levels similar to those in a comparison community in Louisiana and to the U.S. population.[42] Cancer rates in the community were similar to Louisiana and US averages.[43]

[edit] Dioxins
Main article: Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins
The environmentalist group Greenpeace has advocated the global phase-out of PVC because they claim dioxin is produced as a byproduct of vinyl chloride manufacture and from incineration of waste PVC in domestic garbage.[44] PVC produces HCl upon combustion almost quantitatively related to its chlorine content. Extensive studies in Europe indicate that the chlorine found in emitted dioxins is not derived from HCl in the flue gases. Instead, most dioxins arise in the condensed solid phase by the reaction of inorganic chlorides with graphitic structures in char-containing ash particles. Copper acts as a catalyst for these reactions.[45] According to a 1994 report by the British firm, ICI Chemicals & Polymers Ltd., "It has been known since the publication of a paper in 1989 that these oxychlorination reactions [used to make vinyl chloride and some chlorinated solvents] generate polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) and dibenzofurans (PCDFs). The reactions include all of the ingredients and conditions necessary to form PCDD/PCDFs.... It is difficult to see how any of these conditions could be modified so as to prevent PCDD/PCDF formation without seriously impairing the reaction for which the process is designed." In other words, dioxins are an undesirable byproduct of producing vinyl chloride and eliminating the production of dioxins while maintaining the oxychlorination reaction may be difficult. Dioxins created by vinyl chloride production are released by on-site incinerators, flares, boilers, wastewater treatment systems and even in trace quantities in vinyl resins.[46] The US EPA estimate of dioxin releases from the PVC industry was 13 grams TEQ in 1995, or less than 0.5% of the total dioxin emissions in the US; by 2002, PVC industry dioxin emissions had been further reduced by 23%.[47] Studies of household waste burning indicate consistent increases in dioxin generation with increasing PVC concentrations.[48] According to the EPA dioxin inventory, landfill fires are likely to represent an even larger source of dioxin to the environment. A survey of international studies consistently identifies high dioxin concentrations in areas affected by open waste burning and a study that looked at the homologue pattern found the sample with the highest dioxin concentration was "typical for the pyrolysis of PVC". Other EU studies indicate that PVC likely "accounts for the overwhelming majority of chlorine that is available for dioxin formation during landfill fires."[48] The next largest sources of dioxin in the EPA inventory are medical and municipal waste incinerators.[49] Various studies have been conducted that reach contradictory results. For instance a study of commercial-scale incinerators showed no relationship between the PVC content of the waste and dioxin emissions.[50][51] Other studies have shown a clear correlation between dioxin formation and chloride content and indicate that PVC is a significant contributor to the formation of both dioxin and PCB in incinerators.[52] In February 2007, the Technical and Scientific Advisory Committee of the US Green Building Council (USGBC) released its report on a PVC avoidance related materials credit for the LEED Green Building Rating system. The report concludes that "no single material shows up as the best across all the human health and environmental impact categories, nor as the worst" but that the "risk of dioxin emissions puts PVC consistently among the worst materials for human health impacts."[53]

[edit] Bans
The State of California is currently considering a bill that would ban the use of PVC in consumer packaging due to the threats it poses to human and environmental health and its effect on the recycling stream.[54] Specifically, the language of the bill analysis[55] stipulates that EPA has listed vinyl chloride, a "constituent element" of PVC, as a carcinogen[56]. It also further cites that there are concerns about the leaching of phthalates and lead from the PVC packaging.

[edit] Recycling

PVC SPI code, for recycling (Society of the Plastics Industry). The Unicode character for this symbol is U+2675 (HTML character reference ♵).
Recycling of post-consumer PVC is technically feasible. The costs of recycling clean and homogeneous waste streams are generally acceptable. Rigid PVC can be recycled into pipes and profiles. Some PVC manufacturers have placed vinyl recycling programs into action, recycling both manufacturing waste back into their products, as well as post consumer PVC construction materials to reduce the load on landfills. Traditionally, PVC has not been recycled because the cost of virgin resin has been lower than recycling the resin.[citation needed] The thermal depolymerization process can safely and efficiently convert PVC into fuel and minerals[citation needed]. It is not yet in widespread use. A new process of PVC recycling is being developed in Europe called Texiloop.[57] This process is based on a technology already applied industrially in Europe and Japan, called Vinyloop, which consists of recovering PVC plastic from composite materials through dissolution and precipitation. It strives to be a closed loop system, recycling its key solvent and hopefully making PVC a future technical nutrient.

[edit] See also



Plastic pressure pipe systems Plastic recycling Polyvinyl fluoride Polyvinylidene chloride Polyvinylidene fluoride Smart polymer Vinyl roof membrane Petrocasa

[edit] References
1.
^ a b Wilkes, Charles E.; Summers, James W.; Daniels, Charles Anthony; Berard, Mark T. (2005). PVC Handbook. Hanser Verlag. p. 414. ISBN 9781569903797. http://books.google.com/? id=YUkJNI9QYsUC&pg=PA414. 2. ^ "ACC Resin Statistics Annual Summary". http://www.americanchemistry.com/s_acc/sec_policyissues.asp?CID=996&DID=6872. Retrieved 2009-11-18. 3. ^ Ebner, Martin (2008-11-18). "Ceresana Research Releases New Comprehensive PVC Market Study". Newswire Today. http://www.newswiretoday.com/news/42864/. Retrieved 2009-11-18. 4. ^ "PVC Technology". http://books.google.co.uk/books? id=N79YwkVx4kwC&pg=PA6&lpg=PA6&dq=PVC+%22replacement+for+rubber %22&source=bl&ots=4I4UKXMkiM&sig=x7AAhu8Y5a1M_Z7WC467cq3mAqk&hl=en&ei=qJjCTe

XgEIuq8AOFj43DBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CGoQ6AEwBQ#v=onep age&q=PVC%20%22replacement%20for%20rubber%22&f=false. Retrieved 2011-05-04. 5. ^ Chanda, Manas; Roy, Salil K. (2006). Plastics technology handbook. CRC Press. pp. 16. ISBN 9780849370397. 6. ^ Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) 07/08-7 Report, ChemSystems, November 2008. 7. ^ a b Titow 1984, p. 1186. 8. ^ a b Titow 1984, p. 1191. 9. ^ a b c d Titow 1984, p. 857. 10. ^ a b At 60% relative humidity and room temperature. 11. ^ a b Titow 1984, p. 1194. 12. ^ Galloway F.M. et al. (1992). "Surface parameters from small-scale experiments used for measuring HCl transport and decay in fire atmospheres". Fire Mater 15 (4): 181189. doi:10.1002/fam.810150405. 13. ^ Shah Rahman (June 1920 2007). "PVC Pipe & Fittings: Underground Solutions for Water and Sewer Systems in North America" (PDF). 2nd Brazilian PVC Congress, Sao Paulo, Brazil. http://www.institutodopvc.org/congresso2/ShahRahman.pdf. 14. ^ Uses for vinyl: pipe 15. ^ Shah Rahman (October 2004). "Thermoplastics at Work: A Comprehensive Review of Municipal PVC Piping Products" (PDF). Underground Construction: 5661. http://www.oildompublishing.com/uceditorialarchive/october04/oct04utech.pdf. 16. ^ Shah Rahman (April 2007). "Sealing Our Buried Lifelines" (PDF). American Water Works Association (AWWA) OPFLOW magazine: 1217. http://www.hultec.co.za/downloads/Buried_lifelines.pdf. 17. ^ uPVC Windows, Doors 18. ^ PolyVinyl (Poly Vinyl Chloride) in Construction 19. ^ Fascia, Guttering, Fascias, PVCu Soffits, Roofing, Cladding 20. ^ PVC Products - Greenpeace international 21. ^ Environmentally conscious buildings 22. ^ "How safe is your sex toy?". http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/blog/toxics/bad-vibrationswe-expose-an-eu-sex-scandal. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 23. ^ See directive 2005/84/EC 24. ^ Phthalates and children's toys, www.phthalates.org, undated (accessed 2 February 2007) 25. ^ EU Risk assessment summary report 26. ^ Medical Devices; Draft Guidance; Medical Devices Made With Polyvinylchloride Using the Plasticizer di-(2-Ethylhexyl)phthalate; Availability, Food and Drug Administration 27. ^ Vinyl shower curtains a 'volatile' hazard, study says 28. ^ Bornehag; Sundell, J; Weschler, CJ; Sigsgaard, T; Lundgren, B; Hasselgren, M; HgerhedEngman, L (2004). "The Association Between Asthma and Allergic Symptoms in Children and Phthalates in House Dust: A Nested Case-Control Study". Environmental Health Perspectives 112 (14): 13931397. doi:10.1289/ehp.7187. PMC 1247566. PMID 15471731. http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/491620. 29. ^ Phthalate Information Center Blog: More good news from Europe 30. ^ Business Wire (November 21, 2005). "CHW Switches to PVC/DEHP-Free Products to Improve Patient Safety and Protect the Environment". Business Wire. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2005_Nov_21/ai_n15863110. 31. ^ Center for Health, Environment & Justice 32. ^ PVC: the poison plastic 33. ^ Microsoft Completes Phase Out of PVC, the Poison Plastic December 7, 2005 34. ^ Target to systematically reduce use of toxic PVC

35.

^ "Safety Assessment ofDi(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP)Released from PVC Medical Devices" (PDF). http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/ost/dehp-pvc.pdf. 36. ^ Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks 37. ^ Creech and Johnson; Johnson, MN (March 1974). "Angiosarcoma of liver in the manufacture of polyvinyl chloride". Journal of occupational medicine 16 (3): 1501. PMID 4856325. 38. ^ Epidemiologic Notes and Reports Angiosarcoma of the Liver Among Polyvinyl Chloride Workers Kentucky, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site. 1997. 39. ^ National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) for Vinyl Chloride Subpart F, OMB Control Number 2060-0071, EPA ICR Number 0186.09 (Federal Register: September 25 2001 (Volume 66, Number 186)) 40. ^ EPA Toxicologica Review of Vinyl Chloride i Support of Informaiton on the IRIS. May 2000 41. ^ Jim Morris, "In Strictest Confidence. The chemical industry's secrets," Houston Chronicle. Part One: "Toxic Secrecy," June 28, 1998, pgs. 1A, 24A-27A; Part Two: "High-Level Crime," June 29, 1998, pgs. 1,A, 8A, 9A; and Part Three: "Bane on the Bayou," July 26, 1998, pgs. 1A, 16A.] 42. ^ ATSDR Study Finds Dioxin Levels in Calcasieu Parish Residents Similar to National Levels; ATSDR Study Finds Dioxin Levels Among Lafayette Parish Residents Similar to National Levels; ATSDR Report: Serum Dioxin Levels In Residents Of Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana, October 2005, Publication Number PB2006-100561, available from the National Technical Information Services, Springfield, Virginia 43. ^ "Calcasieu Cancer Rates Similar to State/National Averages." News Release, State of Louisiana Dept. of Health and Hospitals. January 17, 2002 44. ^ "How to Find and Avoid Toxic Vinyl (PVC) in Your Home". Greenpeace USA. May 28, 2003. http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/news/how-to-find-and-avoid-toxic-vi. Retrieved 16 February 2010. 45. ^ Steiglitz, L., and Vogg, H., "Formation Decomposition of Polychlorodibenzodioxins and Furans in Municipal Waste" Report KFK4379, Laboratorium fur Isotopentechnik, Institut for Heize Chemi, Kerforschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Feb 1988. 46. ^ Pat Costner etal, "PVC: A Primary Contributor to the U.S. Dioxin Burden; Comments submitted to the U.S. EPA Dioxin Reassessment," (Washington, D.C. Greenpeace U.S.A., February 1995 47. ^ US EPA, The Inventory of Sources and Environmental Releases of Dioxin-Like Compounds in the United States: The Year 2002 Update, May 2007 48. ^ a b Costner, Pat (2005) "Estimating Releases and Prioritizing Sources in the Context of the Stockholm Convention", International POPs Elimination Network, Mexico. 49. ^ Beychok, M.R., A data base of dioxin and furan emissions from municipal refuse incinerators, Atmospheric Environment, Elsevier B.V., January 1987 50. ^ National Renewable Energy Laboratory, "Polyvinyl Chloride Plastics in Municipal Solid Waste Combustion," NREL/TP-430- 5518, Golden CO, April 1993 51. ^ Rigo, H. G.; Chandler, A. J.; Lanier, W.S. (1995) (PDF). The Relationship between Chlorine in Waste Streams and Dioxin Emissions from Waste Combustor Stacks. 36. New York, NY: American Society of Mechanical Engineers. ISBN 0791812227. http://www.pvcinfo.be/bestanden/ASME%20abstract1.pdf. 52. ^ Katami, Takeo, et al. (2002) "Formation of PCDDs, PCDFs, and Coplanar PCBs from Polyvinyl Chloride during Combustion in an Incinerator" Environ. Sci. Technol., 36, 13201324. and Wagner, J., Green, A. 1993. Correlation of chlorinated organic compound emissions from incineration with chlorinated organic input. Chemosphere 26 (11): 20392054. and Thornton, Joe (2002) "Environmental Impacts of polyvinyl Chloride Building Materials", Healthy Building Network, Washington, DC. 53. ^ The USGBC document; An analysis by the Healthy Building NEtwork 54. ^ AB 2505 Californians Against Waste 55. ^ Bill analysis - Assembly committee on environmental safety and toxic materials, April 15, 2008 56. ^ US EPA - Technology Transfer Network, Air Toxics Website - Vinyl Chloride 57. ^ (Dutch) (French) Page 11, "Mise A Jour Du Projet, Projet Ferrari - Texiloop

[edit] Bibliography

Titow, W. (1984). Pvc Technology. London: Elsevier Applied Science Publishers. ISBN 9780853342496. http://books.google.com/books?id=N79YwkVx4kwC.

[edit] External links


Wikimedia Commons has media related to: PVC

The European PVC Portal (European Council of Vinyl Manufacturers) An introduction to vinyl The Vinyl Council of Canada PVC - Bad News Comes in Threes: The Poison Plastic, Health Hazards, and the Looming Waste Crisis (Center for Health, Environment and Justice)

[show]v d eHealth issues of plastics and Polyhalogenated compounds (PHCs)

[show]v d ePlastics Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_chloride" Categories: Plastics | Vinyl polymers | Dielectrics | Nonwoven fabrics | Thermoplastics Hidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from April 2008 | Articles with unsourced statements from December 2010 | Articles with unsourced statements from February 2007 | Articles with unsourced
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Manufacture of PVC
Title Page Introduction History of PVC Manufacture of PVC Disposing of PVC References PVC is the second largest commodity plastic after polyethylene with world production currently over 18 million tonnes a year. The chemical process for making PVC involves three steps: first, production of the monomer, vinyl chloride; then the linking of these monomer units in a polymerisation process; and finally the blending of the polymer with additives.

The Production Process of PVC (For more information, click on diagram)

History of PVC
Title Page Introduction History of PVC Manufacture of PVC Disposing of PVC References The first truly synthetic polymer, Bakelite, was discovered in the USA in 1909 and was safer and tougher than any previously discovered chemically modified variants of natural polymers. Bakelite was made from phenol and formaldehyde and had suitable properties to make it an ideal plastic for electrical appliances. However this plastic had room for improvement which lead to the start of discovering and producing many more synthetic plastics in the years between the two World Wars. This was the time when Hermann Staudinger, a German chemist, finally explained the chemical nature of polymers. His theory was that polymers were built from smaller units that had joined together to form long chains. He was to be proved right. By the end of the 1930s many purely synthetic polymers were in commercial production. One of which was Nylon; discovered by the chemist Wallace Corothers in 1935 and was used to make stockings and went on sale in New York in 1939 as a luxurious novelty.

Another was PVC, first produced commercially in the USA in 1933 and had an important use as cable insulation during the second World War. It then became used for many more applications soon after. With the end of the war in 1945, the chemicals industry that was producing these plastics found a public eager to buy products made from them and within a few years they became part of every day living and their names entered the language.

Products

Title Page Introduction History of PVC Manufacture of PVC Disposing of PVC References

Due to the wide range of properties of PVC , this plastic has a large number of applications: Medical applications: PVC is flexible, strong, durable even under changing temperatures and conditions. It is safe i.e nontoxic, is chemically stable, is highly biocompatible with tissue/blood, is clear and transparent so is used for blood bags and intravenous containers. PVC products can also be easily sterilized e.g with steam or radiation. PVC is also low cost and provides many uses in hospitals such as in flooring of operating theatres and mattress covers as is easy to clean and hygenic. Electical applications: PVC has good insulating properties, it is flexible and durable and is resistant to aggressive environments so is a suitable insulating and sheathing material for wiring and cables used in household goods such as fridges and cookers and also office equipment such as computers and photocopiers. Also wires can be made from PVC in a range a colours which is important for identification purposes. Vehicle applications: The use of PVC in vehicle components reduces the weight of the vehicle hence reduces fuel consumption and so conserves fossil fuels. PVC also increases design freedom and increases safety of the vehicle by providing shock-absorbing parts such as airbags and also fire retardant properties. Building and Construction applications: PVC resists corrosion and weathering and so has many outdoor uses such as water butts, window frames, mud flaps, water pipes and garden furniture. PVC is also tough and doesn't crack and can easily be shaped so can be produced as fibre, foam or film. Toys: PVC is non-toxic, tough and durable and products can be made in a variety of colours providing the perfect material to make toys with. Other slightly unusual applications of PVC include orthopaedic PVC shoes for lame cows and as a material to reconstruct Saint Lambert cathedral, an ancient structure, in the centre of Leige.

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