Hot melt adhesives

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 5362802
  • Patent Number
    5,362,802
  • Date Filed
    Friday, March 18, 1994
    30 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 8, 1994
    30 years ago
Abstract
Polymers containing a high percentage of vinyl alcohol units, especially when treated to remove impurities, when blended with copolymers of alkyl (meth)acrylates, N-vinyllactams or N-vinylamides, and unsaturated acids, preferably further with a small amount of plasticizer, may be applied as hot melt adhesives to paper, wood, and other cellulosic articles.
Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to blends, especially melt-processable blends, of polymers containing a high percentage of vinyl alcohol units blended with certain copolymers of alkyl methacrylates with N-vinyllactams or N-vinylamides and with unsaturated acids. It further relates to blends, especially melt-processed blends, of these polymers in the form of hot melt adhesives, as well as formed objects which exhibit an useful balance of barrier and strength properties, such as good resistance to permeation of gases, low moisture absorptivity, and toughness/modulus balance adequate for packaging uses.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Of all the synthetic polymers considered as materials with useful gas permeation properties, such as resistance to passage of oxygen, carbon dioxide, water, and the like, poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVOH), a polymer made up of units of the structure ##STR1## and generally prepared by the total hydrolysis of homopolymers of vinyl acetate and related vinyl esters, the starting polymer made up of units of the structure ##STR2## where R is H or --(CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3 and m is 0 to 7, preferably 0, ranks as the most impervious to the passage of small molecules. PVOH derives this property from the high cohesive energy density and polarity of the hydroxy groups. The presence of the network of hydroxy groups has the concomitant effect of rendering the polymer (PVOH) impermeable to gases, but sensitive to moisture. The strong intermolecular interaction resulting from the high polarity of the --OH functional group gives rise to a melting temperature in the vicinity of the degradation temperature of PVOH. Consequently, melting is accompanied by degradation. The degradation is so severe that PVOH by itself cannot either be melt extruded or injection molded.
The above limitations were surmounted by the preparation and subsequent hydrolysis of vinyl acetate copolymers with monomers other than vinyl esters, especially copolymers with olefins, such as ethylene, propylene, butene-1, and the like. Hydrolysis of ethylene/vinyl acetate copolymers provides a polymer which exhibits those desirable characteristics of PVOH, but is superior to PVOH in performance in hydrophilic environments, such as wet strength, and in melt processability. However, these copolymers exhibit a significant increase in the permeability of the polymer to small molecules. Polymers having a low mol percentage of ethylene, such as from about 5 to about 25 mol percent, are similar to poly(vinyl alcohol) in that they cannot be melt-processed into film without the aid of plasticizers.
In order to render PVOH melt processable, steps have been taken to break up the crystallinity by the addition of external plasticizers. Amongst the best known plasticizers of PVOH are the polyols; these include polyethylene glycol, glycerol, and neopentyl glycol. The use of small molecules or oligomers as plasticizers for PVOH has its inherent limitations and disadvantages. The current state of the art technology employs 10-25 parts of plasticizer to 100 parts of PVOH. A higher concentration of plasticizer leads to phase separation and embrittlement of the plasticized matrix. Low levels of plasticizer, on the other hand, lead to the formation of highly viscous inextrudable melts during melt processing and extrusion. Another shortcoming of plasticized PVOH is the occurrence of plasticizer migration, which arises during thermal processing such as extrusion and heat sealing of PVOH film. During extrusion, the low molecular weight plasticizer may deposit at the die lips. During heat sealing, the low molecular weight plasticizer will migrate and evaporate from the heated region of the film. In the absence of the plasticizer, the PVOH rapidly recrystallizes and embrittles the heat sealed portion of the film. In a packaging application, this embrittlement can compromise the integrity of the package via cracks and pinholes. Another shortcoming of externally plasticized PVOH, which manifests itself when the plasticized PVOH resin comes into contact with alkaline or acidic solvents, is the hydrolysis and subsequent embrittlement of the partially hydrolyzed PVOH resin that is frequently used in preparing plasticized PVOH material.
Preparation of internally plasticized PVOH resin by polymerization of vinyl acetate in the presence of a plasticizer or second polymer has been studied to overcome the above difficulties, but such polymerizations, especially in emulsion, offer limitations caused by the difficulty of dispersing the plasticizer or pre-formed second polymer where it is intimately admixed with the polymerizing vinyl ester, which has a significant degree of water solubility.
In spite of the fact that all of the above mentioned techniques have the effect of improving the melt processing characteristics of PVOH, they also have the concomitant effects of significantly increasing the permeability of the resin to small molecules and reducing the stiffness and heat distortion temperature of the resin. Thus there exists a need for a means to allow melt-processing of polymers of high vinyl alcohol content, such as fully hydrolyzed or highly hydrolyzed polymers of vinyl esters, into useful objects maintaining most of the barrier properties of the polymer of high vinyl alcohol content. There further exists a need for additive polymers which may be blended with polymers of high vinyl alcohol content to enhance their ability to form films and coatings with improved properties of the film or coating without much loss in barrier properties.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,147,930 are disclosed, among many others, blends of (a) copolymers of poly(C.sub.1 -C.sub.4) alkyl methacrylates with N-vinylpyrrolidone, it being taught that such copolymers could optionally contain (meth)acrylic acid, with (b) polymers and copolymers containing at least 50 mol percent of vinyl alcohol mers (equivalent to the present description of polymers containing units of the structure ##STR3## the amounts of (a) and (b) in the blend being 20 to 95% by weight and 2.5 to about 40% by weight respectively. These specific blends of this Patent are directed towards improved barrier properties of the acrylic polymer, thus the high ratio of (a) to (b).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
We have found that blends of polymers having at least 50 mol percent of vinyl alcohol units, the remaining being vinyl ester residues, with a second copolymer of C.sub.1 -C.sub.4 alkyl esters of (meth)acrylic acid with N-vinyllactams with 4, 5, 6 or 7 membered rings or with N-vinylamides provide compositions having an attractive balance of optical properties, strength/toughness values, and barrier properties. We have further found that a melt-processable polymeric blend comprising (a) from about 50 to about 90 parts of a first polymer comprising at least about 50 mol percent to at least about 95 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR4## and from about 5 mol percent to about 50 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR5## and/or about 5 to about 15 mol percent of units of ##STR6## where R is H or --(OCH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, and where m is 0 to 7 and/or ##STR7## where R.sub.1 is an alkyleneoxy group or a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 lower alkyl group and R.sub.3 is H or CH.sub.3, and (b) from about 10 to about 50 parts of a second polymer comprising from about 5 to about 35 weight of units of the structure ##STR8## where n is 2, 3, 4 or 5, and from about 65 to about 95 weight percent of units derived from a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 alkyl ester of (meth)acrylic acid, may be formed into useful objects such as sheet, film, and the like having useful barrier properties. We have further found that useful objects having similar attractive properties may be formed from a melt-processable polymeric blend comprising a) from about 50 to about 90 parts of a first polymer comprising at least about 95 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR9## and less than about 5 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR10## where R is H or --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, and where m is 0 to 7, and where R.sub.3 is CH.sub.3 or H, and R.sub.1 is an alkyleneoxy group or a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 lower alkyl group, with (b) from about 10 to about 50 parts of a second polymer comprising from about 25 to about 95 weight percent of units of the structure ##STR11## where n is 2, 3, 4 or 5, and from about 5 to about 75 weight percent of units derived from a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 alkyl ester of (meth)acrylic acid.
We have further found that improvements may be made in the melt-processing of such blends when the second polymer also contains from about 1 to about 10 weight percent of units derived from an unsaturated copolymerizable organic add. The presence of the copolymerized add units enlarges the range of compositions of useful additive polymers containing amide or cyclic amide units and (meth)acrylate ester units which produce melt-processable blends.
The additive polymer may be a tetrapolymer containing acid units, amide or cyclic amide units, and more than one (meth)acrylate ester units. Such tetrapolymers, especially those with an acrylate ester copolymerized, have somewhat lower softening temperatures, within the vicinity of the glass temperature of the amorphous phase of the polymer containing vinyl alcohol units, so that melt blending is easier to control, without a significant decrease in physical properties of the blend.
The first polymer may be a blend of more than one polymer containing vinyl alcohol units, such as those of differing molecular weight.
We have further found that lower levels, down to 2 parts, of the second additive may be used in the melt-processable blend when the first polymer, containing vinyl alcohol units, has been washed or has been neutralized with acid such as phosphoric acid to remove residual sodium acetate, as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 3,425,979. The art teaches that sodium acetate from the alkaline hydrolysis of the copolymerized vinyl acetate accelerates the formation of conjugated species and chemical cross-links upon heating the polymer containing vinyl alcohol units to within a few degrees of its melting temperature. Washing to lower the level of sodium acetate to below about 0.1 weight percent, or treatment with an add such as phosphoric acid, whose sodium salt is not deleterious to degradation of the polymer containing vinyl alcohol units, produces a polymer of enhanced thermal stability which allows the use of less of the acrylic additive in the melt-processable blend. When the acid treatment is used, the acetic acid formed is removed in the extrusion process by appropriate venting. In both treatments, essentially all of the sodium acetate is removed, so that the content of sodium acetate is less than about 0.1 wt. percent, based on the polymer containing vinyl alcohol.
Thus, we have found that a polymeric blend comprising from about 50 to about 90 parts of a first polymer containing units of the structure ##STR12## and optionally units of the structure ##STR13## where R is H or --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, and where m is 0 to 7, and from about 10 to about 50 parts of a second polymer containing from about 5 to about 95 parts of units of the structure ##STR14## where n is 2, 3, 4, or 5, from about 94 to about 4 parts of units of the structure ##STR15## where R.sub.2 is C.sub.1 --C.sub.4 alkyl, and from about 1 to about 10 parts of a copolymerizable unsaturated acid, may be melt-processed into useful objects such as sheet, film, and fiber.
We further have found that blending of the two polymers by melt-mixing will form a segmented polymer comprising at least one segment of a first polymer containing at least 50 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR16## and optionally units of the structure ##STR17## where R is H or --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, and where m is 0 to 7, where R.sub.1 is an alkyleneoxy or a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 lower alkyl group, and where R.sub.3 is H or CH.sub.3, and chemically joined or grafted thereto at least one segment of a second polymer containing from about 5 to about 95 parts by weight of units of the structure ##STR18## where n is 2, 3, 4, or 5 and R.sub.4, R.sub.5, and R.sub.6 are defined below, about 94 to about 4 parts by weight of units of the structure ##STR19## where R.sub.2 is C.sub.1 --C.sub.4 alkyl, and from about 1 to about 10 parts of units derived from a copolymerizable unsaturated acid. It is preferred, for the purposes of this invention, that the first segment polymer is from about 50 to about 90 parts by weight of the segmented copolymer.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The blends of the vinyl alcohol polymers and the (meth)acrylate/vinyllactam polymers may be formed into useful objects by many techniques, including casting from solution, compression molding of powder blends, formation of films and sheets from mixtures of latices and water-soluble polymers, extrusion of melt blends, and the like. The scope of the invention is not limited by the means of processing.
However, not all combinations of the two polymer classes can be melt processed. By melt-processable is meant that the polymer or blend can be converted from a solid form such as pellets, powder, and the like into a viscoelastic melt within an extruder or other heating/mixing device, that the melt is thermally stable enough to resist thermal degradation, and that the melt can be processed by extrusion, calendering, laminating, molding and the like into useful objects. The melt will neither be so liquid that it cannot be contained within the extruder or cannot be issued from the extruder in solid form, nor will it be so viscous that the extruder is incapable of processing it without damage to the equipment, nor will it be so thermally unstable that degradation will spoil the appearance or physical properties of objects processed from the melt. Further, the melt and resulting extrudate must be uniform in appearance.
The first polymer of the blend, which we shall designate PVOH, is a homopolymer or a copolymer of "vinyl alcohol" and a vinyl ester. Vinyl alcohol does not exist in monomeric form, and polymers containing such units must perforce be derived by chemical alteration of polymers derived from another monomer. The most common means of preparing such polymers is to polymerize a vinyl ester, such as vinyl formate, vinyl acetate, and the like of the structure ##STR20## where R is H or --(CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, where m is from 0 to 7. Especially preferred is vinyl acetate, where R is --(CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3 and m=0. Such polymers may be almost completely saponified or hydrolyzed to form polymers of greater than 99 mol % "vinyl alcohol". A small number of ##STR21## repeat units may be present. By controlling the conditions of hydrolysis or saponification, copolymers of the vinyl ester and vinyl alcohol may be formed. A range of such compositions are commercially available. The range of from about 50 mol % to about 100 mol % of vinyl alcohol is encompassed in the invention. Other co-monomers may be present in the first polymer, but at low molar levels, such as below about 10 mol %. Such co-monomers may include (meth)acrylic esters, such as alkyl esters, such as ethyl acrylate, butyl methacrylate, and the like, hydroxyalkyl (meth)acrylates, such as beta-hydroxyethyl methacrylate, and the like, olefins, such as ethylene, propylene, butene-1 and the like, vinyl halides, such as vinyl chloride, N-vinyllactams, maleic anhydride, dialkyl maleates, dialkyl fumarates, and the like. As noted, most commercial copolymers of ethylene and vinyl alcohol, having a relatively low mol % of vinyl alcohol content and diminished barrier properties, are unsuitable for the purposes of the present invention; however, copolymers of from about 5 to about 25 mol percent ethylene, preferably from about 5 to about 15 mol percent, may be melt-processed when blended with the copolymers of lower alkyl (meth)acrylates disclosed herein.
The partially or totally hydrolyzed PVOH employed in this invention possess a molecular weight (weight average) between 13,000 and 186,000, but preferably between 31,000 and 50,000. The viscosity of these two ranges of average molecular weights may also be measured in solution, and will vary from 3-50 cPs (4% aqueous solutions, 20.degree. C.), preferably between 22-26 cPs. If PVOH of a lower degree of saponification (50-87 mol %) is utilized, the polymer may be of higher molecular weight.
The first polymer may also contain units derived from alkyleneoxy (meth)acrylates, such as are described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,618,648, incorporated herein by reference. Such alkyleneoxy (meth)acrylates are esters of (meth)acrylic acid having as the "alcohol" portion oligomers of --CH.sub.2 --CHY--O units, where Y is hydrogen or methyl, and are derived from oligomerization of ethylene and/or propylene oxide. They may be terminated at one end by alkyl, aryl, or alkaryl groups, such as C.sub.1 -C.sub.20 alkyl, C.sub.6 aryl or C.sub.7 -C.sub.20 alkaryl group.
The second component of the melt-processable blend is a polymer which is a copolymer of from about 5 to 95 parts of a C.sub.1 to C.sub.4 alkyl ester of acrylic or methacrylic acid, preferably the C.sub.1 ester of methacrylic acid, which is methyl methacrylate, with from about 95 to about 5 parts of a N-vinyllactam, that is, a monomer of the structure ##STR22## where n is 2,3, or 4. Such monomers include N-vinylpropiolactam, N-vinylpyrrolidone (otherwise known as N-vinylbutyrolactam), and N-vinylcaprolactam. Preferred is the lactam wherein n=3, which is N-vinylpyrrolidone (NVP), for reasons of commercial availability. Methyl methacrylate (MMA) is preferred because it endows the copolymer with a higher service temperature and a higher degree of polarity for best compatibility with the PVOH.
The vinyllactams may be replaced in part or completely by monomers of the structure
CH.sub.2 .dbd.C(R.sub.3)--CO--NR.sub.4 R.sub.5
where R.sub.3 is H or CH.sub.3, R.sub.4 and R.sub.5 may be the same or different and are H, C.sub.1 -C.sub.4 alkyl, or --C.sub.2 H.sub.4 --(O--C.sub.2 H.sub.4)-- in a cyclic form. They may further be replaced in part or completely by monomers of the structure
CH.sub.2 .dbd.C(R.sub.3)--C(O)O--CH.sub.2 --CH.sub.2 --R.sub.6
CH.sub.2 .dbd.C(R.sub.3)--C(O)NR.sub.4 --CH.sub.2 --CH.sub.2 --R.sub.6
where R.sub.6 is a urea or cyclic ureido structure of the formula ##STR23## They may further be replaced in part or completely by monomers of the structure
CH.sub.2 .dbd.CH--NH--C(O)--R
such as N-vinylacetamide and the like.
It is preferred that the second copolymer further contain from about 1 to about 10 parts of units derived from at least one copolymerizable unsaturated acid. Contemplated are acids such as carboxylic acids, sulfonic acids, phosphonic acids, and the like, such as those incorporated from monomers such as p-vinylbenzenesulfonic acid, beta-methacryloxyethylphosphonic acid, methacrylic acid, and the like.
A preferred blend composition comprises
a) from about 70 to about 90 parts of the first polymer wherein the first polymer contains more than about 85 mole percent of units of the structure ##STR24## and less than about 15 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR25## (where R is --H or --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3 and where R is --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, m is 0),
b) from about 10 to about 30 parts of the second polymer containing from about 5 to about 35 parts of units of the structure ##STR26## where n is 3, from about 60 to about 94 parts of units of the structure ##STR27## where R.sub.2 is --CH.sub.3, and from about 1 to about 5 parts of a copolymerizable unsaturated acid wherein the acid is methacrylic acid, acrylic acid, itaconic acid, maleic acid, fumaric acid, acryloxypropionic acid, or alpha-methylene-delta-methylglutaric acid. Of the acids, especially preferred for cost and ease of incorporation, is methacrylic acid.
Other monomers may be copolymerized with those stated above which comprise the second copolymer, as long as they do not adversely affect either the copolymerization behavior, the processing of the blends, or the physical properties of the blend. Such monomers include up to about 10 parts of vinyl esters, such as vinyl acetate, vinyl aromatics, such as styrene, other esters of (meth)acrylic acid, such as glycidyl methacrylate, 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, and the like, (meth)acrylonitrile, and the like.
It is believed that when the acid group is present in the second copolymer that a chemical reaction occurs with the poly(vinyl alcohol) to produce a segmented copolymer of the structure described above. A preferred embodiment of this segmented copolymer comprises a segmented copolymer wherein the trunk contains more than about 85 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR28## less than about 15 mol percent of units of the structure ##STR29## where R is --(--CH.sub.2).sub.m --CH.sub.3, and where m is 0, wherein the grafted or side-chain polymer contains from about 5 to about 35 parts by weight of units of the structure ##STR30## where n is 3, about 94 to about 64 parts by weight of units of the structure ##STR31## where R.sub.2 is --CH.sub.3, and from about 1 to about 5 parts of units derived from methacrylic acid, and wherein the trunk polymer is from about 70 to about 90 parts by weight of the graft copolymer.
The extent of grafting may be enhanced by the presence of catalysts for esterification reactions between acid or anhydride groups and alcohol groups, or by catalysts for reaction of epoxy groups with acid groups. Such catalysts may include acids, bases, organotin catalysts, organotitanium catalysts, and the like. The esterification reaction may be enhanced also by removal of water formed during the grafting reaction, such as by vacuum application to the reactor, such as a vacuum vent on the extruder.
The second copolymer may be prepared by any of methods known to the art, such as in bulk, suspension, solution, and the like. Preferred for ease of polymerization, availability of higher molecular weights, and ease of isolating into powdery form, is emulsion polymerization. The weight-average molecular weight of the second polymer may vary from about 10,000 to about 500,000; preferred for ease of processing, thermal stability, and rheological properties is from about 100,000 to about 200,000. However, when the second polymer contains units derived from an unsaturated acid and when the first polymer is of relatively high molecular weight, the preferred molecular weight range of the second polymer is from about 10,000 to about 100,000. By following the experimental procedures described below, the skilled practitioner can readily determine if appropriate melt strength has been achieved without raising the melt viscosity to the extent that processing and extrusion are difficult.
A compositional range of from about 50 to about 90 parts of the first polymer and correspondingly from about 10 parts to about 50 parts of the second polymer is contemplated. In general, the lower the level of the second polymer required to achieve melt processability, the better will desirable PVOH properties, such as oxygen barrier, be maintained.
The presence in the second polymer of units derived from an unsaturated copolymerizable acid broadens the range of compositions which are useful in achieving the improvements desired in the processing and properties of the first polymer.
The system most thoroughly examined has been with a first polymer being a "homopolymeric" poly(vinyl alcohol) or a copolymer with relatively low levels of vinyl acetate, and the second polymer being a copolymer of methyl methacrylate and N-vinylpyrrolidone. If the acetate content of the PVOH is lower than 5 mol %, the final blend with a methacrylic copolymer, with N-vinyl pyrrolidone content of 5 to 25 weight percent (the remainder being methyl methacrylate), has a melting temperature that is in the vicinity of the degradation temperature. Melt stable blend compositions in which the acetate content of the PVOH is lower than 5 mol percent may be prepared with methacrylic copolymers (MMA-NVP) of N-vinyl pyrrolidone content ranging from 26-95% by weight and methyl methacrylate content ranging from 74 to 5% by weight. PVOH of a saponification degree that is higher than 95 mol %, yields blend compositions that show evidence of macroscopic phase separation and degradation when the acrylic copolymer (MMA-NVP) contains less than about 25 % by weight of N-vinyl pyrrolidone; such blend compositions are thermally and rheologically unstable in the melt. Broader ranges of compositions of the two classes may be used if mixing and processing does not involve melt-processing.
When a copolymerizable unsaturated acid is polymerized with the lower alkyl (meth)acrylate and the lactam-containing monomer (or those amide or ureido-containing monomers which may replace the lactam monomer), the useful compositional range is widened, in that the resulting additive polymer shows broader utility with the first polymer, especially when the first polymer is a polymer which is mainly composed of units derived from vinyl alcohol. The amount of lactam-containing monomer in the second polymer may be varied over a wider range and the useful levels of the additive polymer may also be varied over a wider range. For this reason, such ternary additive polymers are preferred.
When the PVOH retains enough acetate groups to translate into a degree of saponification lower than 95 mol %, then the second copolymer will contain from about 5 to about 35 parts of the N-vinyllactam monomer and from about 65 to about 95 parts of the (meth)acrylate ester. Preferred for this purpose as the first polymer is a copolymer of vinyl acetate hydrolyzed or saponified to a degree to retain from about 5 to about 13 mole % of vinyl acetate units. Such blends are suitable, for example, as water-dispersible films. However, for certain properties such as barrier to gases, it is preferred that first polymer be essentially fully hydrolyzed.
The (meth)acrylate copolymers used in this invention were prepared by emulsion polymerization of commercially available acrylic or methacrylic esters, such as methyl methacrylate, unsaturated acid, and NVP monomers. However, other suitably adapted polymerization methods such as solution, suspension, or bulk polymerization may also serve to prepare the copolymers.
As noted, when the second polymer contains units derived from an unsaturated acid, anhydride, or epoxy-group containing monomer, chemical attachment occurs between the first and second polymers. These chemically joined polymers are defined as segmented polymers, where at least one segment of the first polymer as defined above is chemically joined to at least one segment of the second polymer. Since both types of segment have, prior to chemically joining, more than one reactive group, at this stage of investigation, it is difficult to describe the structure of the segmented polymer in conventional "graft copolymer" terminology. Depending on the relative amounts of first and second polymers and the extent of reaction, it is difficult to state which polymer is the trunk and which the graft.
Graft copolymers with poly(vinyl alcohol) trunks and (meth)acrylate-based grafts or side chains have been known for many years, and may be prepared by use of cerium (+IV) catalysts to form radical sites on the poly(vinyl alcohol) and then to initiate polymerization of the (meth)acrylate monomers from these sites. However, it is believed the present segmented copolymers are novel.
Blending of the two copolymers may be carried out most conveniently by dry mixing the finely granulated polymer particles prior to melt compounding in a single- or twin-screw extruder. The blend may further be prepared by admixing the additive polymer in emulsion form, when an emulsion polymerization is a feasible way to prepare the additive polymer, with the poly(vinyl alcohol) in solid form, and then processing directly with water removal such as by extrusion in a vented extruder, or by drying the powder blend under vacuum, and then blending with the matrix polymer. In the process of dry blending, small quantities of additives may be added to the mixture of particulates for the purpose of improving the physical properties of the blend. Examples of additives may include one or more of the following classes of compounds: antioxidant, ultraviolet light absorbers, plasticizers, antistatic agent, slip agents, coloring agents, fillers and other compounds. Further, fugitive plasticizers, such as water in amounts about 3%, may be added to aid in compounding and processing the blend. The blend may further contain glycerol in small amounts. Although glycerol may lower the glass temperature of the final blend, it can aid in obtaining better admixture of the two components, so as to avoid presence of gel or requirement of extensive melt-mixing.
The blend may further contain impact modifiers known to the art, such as multistage polymers based on a poly(acrylate) first stage or a polybutadiene first stage and a methacrylate or styrene second stage, which may be present as a shell or in separate domains within the core. Either stage may contain acid-functional groups.
The blends of the present invention, especially those which are melt-processable, are useful in many applications. When the vinyl alcohol polymer is water-soluble, a film from the blends can be broken down in water for ready disposal. Such blends in film form may also be useful as containers for toxic, corrosive, or skin-sensitizing chemicals which are to be used in water, such as agricultural chemicals to be sprayed. The blends in film form such as in blown film, are useful as high gas barrier films for packaging, especially of food. The films from the blends can be laminated onto substrates to form useful barrier structures for containment or packaging of food or beverages. The blends in container form, such as film, bottles, and the like may be used to exclude gases such as oxygen or to contain gases such as carbon dioxide. Blends with improved heat distortion properties may be useful in hot fill packaging or in retortable or sterilizable container packaging. The blends or laminates may also be useful in museum and other glazing where clarity and long-term retention of an inert atmosphere are desired. The blends may also be useful in bags for medical laundry, and for lamination of films to paper.
The blends of the present invention may be considered as a polymer containing vinyl alcohol units modified with a processing aid, since the acrylic copolymer additive enables the poly(vinyl alcohol) to be melt-processed with a reduced tendency towards thermal decomposition, and aids in the formation of melt-processable objects or melt-processable intermediates, such as pellets.
The blends of the present invention may be used to form useful fibers. The blends may be processed from the melt or from a solvent-swollen gel. The melt-processable blends may be passed through an appropriate die to form filaments which may be stranded into single or multi-stranded fibers of various thicknesses.
The fibers may then be further processed into appropriate products, such as packaging materials, water-soluble disposable cloths, such as diapers, and the like. The fibers may be post-treated after forming by chemicals which will insolubilize the poly(vinyl alcohol), and the resulting fibers may be processed into articles with high moisture uptake which do not dissolve in water. Further, the polymers may be spun by a solid state process wherein the fiber is oriented in the solid state to produce a fiber with a very high tensile modulus.
Films from the present blends may be laminated, co-extruded, or co-injection molded to form laminated structures with a good combination of clarity, toughness, and barrier properties. For example, a blend of a 3:1 methyl methacrylate/N-vinylpyrrolidone copolymer in admixture with poly(vinyl alcohol) in a 50//50 mixture may be co-extruded with poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), with poly(methyl methacrylate), with poly(vinyl chloride), or with polycarbonate, to form continuous laminated film with good adhesion between the layers. The co-extruded film with PET can be thermoformed into useful objects without delamination. The blend may be varied through other compositional ratios, such as 60//40 or 80//20, and other combinations of copolymer, poly(vinyl alcohol) and other polymer may be co-extruded using technology known to the art.
The blends described herein are also useful as hot-melt adhesives. A hot-melt adhesive is a thermoplastic polymer that is heated to obtain a liquid of flowable viscosity, and after application in adhesive form, is cooled to obtain a solid which in the solid form has sufficient,adhesive and cohesive strength to maintain an acceptable adhesive bond against the test or use forces applied.
It is important with hot melt adhesives to join the two surfaces to be bonded together whilst the adhesive is still fluid. The term "open time" refers to the time interval between application of and setting or hardening of the molten adhesive.
Hot melt additives are useful because they do not generate any water or solvent effluent, and thus are attractive for their lower cost, 100% efficiency, and their ecological benefits.
Hot melt additives may be dispersed front small hand-made "guns" or valved dispensing nozzles to large machines pumping adhesive through slot jaws. They may also be dispersed in the foamed form. For application of complex adhesive patterns, an embossed roll is used. In some cases, the hot adhesive may be applied to one surface to be bonded, cooled, then re-heated at the time of bonding to the second surface. In some cases, the adhesive may be in powder form; as such, it is distributed upon one surface, heated in place, and the second surface to be bonded then applied.
PVOH resins of diverse degree of hydrolysis and molecular weight are currently employed as adhesives in the fabrication of a large number of products such as: bag making, carton sealing, Kraft paper band making, corrugating, paper tubing, book binding, paper board laminating, remoistenable adhesive (aqueous base), tapes, trading stamps, postage stamps, labels, decals, envelopes etc. The adhesive is prepared from a PVOH-water solution or suspension at a low (7-20% w/w) solid content. The substrate is coated with wax before application of the aqueous solution. The adhesive coated substrate is dried at a temperature gradient, which ranges from 80.degree. to 170 .degree. C., in a drying oven for 10 to 15 minutes. The above method of application of the adhesive is a direct consequence of the inherent thermal instability of PVOH. Because of the high cohesive energy density and polarity due to the hydroxy groups, attempts to melt PVOH result in severe degradation. The strong inter- and intramolecular interactions resulting from the high polarity of the --OH functional group give rise to a melting temperature in the vicinity of the degradation temperature of PVOH. Consequently, melting is accompanied by degradation.
In order to render PVOH melt processable, steps have been taken to break up the hydrogen bonding network and crystallinity by the addition of external plasticizers. This technique is well known in the art and clearly elucidated in U.S. Pat. No. 3,143,518, which describes the preparation and use of PVOH-propylene glycol compositions as hot melt adhesive. U.S. Pat. No. 3,121,701 also provides examples of the use of highly plasticized partially hydrolyzed PVOH as hot melt adhesive. Amongst the best known plasticizers of PVOH are the solid and liquid polyols; these include polyethylene glycol, neopentyl glycol, 2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentanediol and glycerol respectively.
The use of small molecules or oligomers as plasticizers for hot melt adhesives based on PVOH has its inherent limitations and disadvantages. The current state of the art in PVOH hot melt adhesive technology employs 10-40 parts of plasticizer to 100 parts of PVOH. This high level of plasticization leads to phase separation and embrittlement of the plasticized matrix. Low levels of plasticizer concentration, on the other hand, lead to the formation of highly viscous inextrudable melts during reprocessing. Upon re-melting plasticized PVOH, the low molecular weight plasticizer migrates and evaporates from the molten resin. In the absence of the plasticizer, the PVOH rapidly recrystallizes and embrittles the adhesive. In the hot melt adhesive application, this embrittlement compromises the integrity of the bond between adhesive and substrate. Another shortcoming of externally plasticized PVOH, which manifests itself when the plasticized PVOH resin comes into contact with alkaline or acidic solvents, is the hydrolysis and subsequent embrittlement of the partially hydrolyzed PVOH resin that is frequently used in the preparation of plasticized PVOH material.
One of the unexpected advantages of the use of the present acrylic additives to plasticized PVOH is that the acrylic additive suppresses plasticizer migration. While it is desirable to use as little as possible to achieve the desired end-use performance, for hot-melt adhesives, for example, it is possible (and indeed, preferred for the purposes of lowering the viscosity of the melt at application temperatures) to use up to 20 parts of plasticizer to decrease melt viscosity without undesirable plasticizer migration.
The examples described in TABLES XXIX and XXX are illustrative of the efficacy of the acrylic-modified PVOH as a hot melt adhesive, when the PVOH containing at least about 85 mol % units of "vinyl alcohol". The composition of each example is given in weight percent. For most hot melt adhesive uses, the amount of the acrylic additive polymer is from about 2 to about 10 parts. The particular PVOH polymers used in the examples were obtained from AIR PRODUCTS (AIRVOL) and DuPont (ELVANOL). The polymers are as follows: AIRVOL-107 is a fully hydrolyzed (98.0-98.8 mol %) resin having a solution viscosity of 5.4-6.5 cPs determined on a 4% aqueous solution at 20.degree. C. The molecular weight of this polymer is Mw=31-50,000. AIRVOL-321 is also a fully hydrolyzed PVOH resin of solution viscosity ranging from 16.5 to 20.5 and Mw ranging from about 93 to 150,000. AIRVOL-205 is a partially hydrolyzed (87-89 mol %) resin of similar solution viscosity and molecular weight to that of AIRVOL-107. ELVANOL-5105 is a low solution viscosity (5-6 cPs), gel resistant, partially hydrolyzed (87-89 mol %) PVOH resin. The acrylic ter- and tetrapolymers were prepared from commercially available monomers (MMA, EA, N; P and MAA) by emulsion polymerization and isolated by spray drying or coagulation.
For hot melt adhesive uses, the preferred composition of the acrylic additives is from about 64 to about 94 parts of (meth)acrylate ester, from about 5 to about 35 parts of N-vinyllactam, N-vinylamide, or other N-containing monomers, and from about 1 to about 10 parts of an unsaturated acid, anhydride, or unsaturated glycidyl ester.
The adhesive compositions may also include any or all of the following: preservatives, antioxidants, glyceryl ester of hydrogenated wood rosin, corn or potato starch, ethylene glycol, trimethylene glycol, tetramethylene glycol, pentamethylene glycol, hexamethylene glycol, propylene glycol, glycerin, 2,3-butanediol, 1,3-butanediol, diethylene glycol, triethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol, ethyleneurea, urea, sorbitol and mannitol. A tackifying resin such as rosin or terpene phenol may also be added to the blend compositions. The use of low levels of glycerol is exemplified in the final examples.
The acrylic copolymers (MMA-NVP or MMA-NVP-MAA) were prepared from commercially available MMA and NVP monomers by emulsion polymerization and isolated by a coagulation or freeze drying technique. The particular copolymers described in the examples may contain from 5-25 weight percent of NVP, the balance being MMA; from 0 to 10% methacrylic acid may be present. The presence of MAA has little effect on the polymerization reaction.
EXAMPLES
The following examples will illustrate the properties of the blend compositions. All compositions referred to in the examples are in weight percent or parts by weight unless otherwise specified. All compositions of the following examples were dry blended to yield homogeneous mixtures of finely divided particulates. In each case the mixture of fine white powder was melt compounded in a single screw Killion Extruder at temperatures ranging from 204.degree.-222.degree. C. and a screw speed of 80 rpm. The pellets derived from each of the above examples were evaluated on a system 90 Torque Rheometer for thermal and rheological stability. Each blend composition was tested under similar conditions of temperature (195.degree. C.), rotor rate of 80 RPM and residence time of 30 minutes. The value of the `stable torque` is derived from the torque versus time plot. This value occurs as a minimum and it characterizes the viscous nature of the melt. The high `stable torque` value obtained for PVOH, alone may arise as a result of cross-linking which has the effect of rendering the resin inadequate for processing by current thermoplastic processing methods. The `degradation time` and `degradation rate` were measured by carefully observing the progressive discoloration of the sample and the eventual formation of charred particles during melt mixing in the bowl of the Torque Rheometer. The observation was facilitated by sampling the melt throughout the duration of the residence time. The `degradation time` was taken as the time at which charred particles first began to appear. The `degradation rate`, on the other hand, was recorded as the slope of the torque versus time plot at the onset-time of degradation. Each of the blend compositions, and the base polymer PVOH, was analyzed by the capillary rheometer.
The test method used in the evaluation of the rheological characteristics of the base polymer and the blends is ASTM D3835-79, which provides the necessary correlation between actual processing conditions and the test conditions. The melt viscosity of the base resin, PVOH, is inadequate for such thermal processing applications as extrusion blow molding, co-extrusion, thermoforming etc. To adequately satisfy the processing requirements, the resin should exhibit a non-Newtonian response, i.e. having a low viscosity under high shear conditions such as those encountered during extrusion and a high viscosity under the low shear conditions experienced by blow molded parisons and thermoformed articles. Consequently, the test method evaluates the thermal, rheological and shear stability of the molten polymer. The melt viscosity of the base polymers and blends was measured under the same temperatures and piston speed set conditions. Under a given set of shear rates, the viscosity of the base polymer, PVOH, is lower than that of the alloys.
The particular materials used in the examples were as follows:
a) PVOH-1 (from Air Products, commercially designated AIRVOL.RTM.-523) is a partially hydrolyzed (87-89 mol %) resin having a solution viscosity of 22-26 cPs determined on a 4% aqueous solution at 20.degree. C. The Mw of this PVOH is 85,000-146,000. PVOH-2 resin is Air Products AIRVOL.RTM.-205 which is a partially hydrolyzed (87-89 mol %) resin possessing a solution viscosity of 5-6 cPs when determined on a 4% aqueous solution at 20.degree. C.; it has a Mw of 31,000-50,000.
The acrylic copolymers (MMA-NVP or MMA-NVP-MAA) were prepared from commercially available MMA and NVP monomers by emulsion polymerization and isolated by a coagulation or freeze drying technique. The particular copolymers described in the examples may contain from 5-25 weight percent of NVP, the balance being MMA; from 0 to 10% methacrylic acid may be present. The presence of MAA has little effect on the polymerization reaction.
In Experiments 38 and following, Haake testing was conducted at 200.degree. C., a rotor rate of 80 rpm, and a mixing time of ca. 30 minutes. Values of torque are plotted vs. time to determine the stable torque values. The time to char formation was also noted.
EXAMPLE 1
This example teaches the general method for preparing copolymers of methyl methacrylate and N-vinyl pyrrolidone. A copolymer comprising 25 weight percent of NVP and the remainder MMA was prepared by an emulsion polymerization technique as follows: A monomer mixture (Mix M) was prepared, having methyl methacrylate: N-vinyl pyrrolidone ratio of 75:25. The mixture contained 4237.5 grams of MMA, 1412.5 grams of NVP, 16.95 grams of N-dodecyl mercaptan, 3333.74 grams of deionized water and 105.94 grams of a 10% aqueous sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate solution.
Each monomer mixture was polymerized according to the following procedure. To an appropriate glass vessel equipped with stirrer, heater, a reflux condenser, and nitrogen sparge tube, was added 7467.57 grams of deionized water, and 2.52 grams of sodium carbonate. The mixture was sparged for one hour with nitrogen while heating to 70.degree. C. The sparge was then changed to a sweep and 317.81 grams of a 10% aqueous solution of sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate was added to the mixture. The temperature of the reaction vessel was then raised to 85.degree. C. At this temperature, 124.96 mL of the initiator mixture (Mix I, which consisted of 5.65 grams of sodium persulfate and 1618.86 grams of deionized water) was added to the reaction vessel. The monomer mixture (Mix M) was then fed into the reaction vessel over a time period of three hours.
As the polymerization proceeded, the initiator mixture was added to the reaction vessel at the rate of 124.96 mL every 15 minutes. The accumulation of solids was measured every 60 minutes just before the addition of the initiator mixture. At the completion of the initiator and monomer addition the mixture was held at 85.degree. C. for one hour. The mixture was then cooled, filtered and the polymer isolated by freeze-drying. The initiator may also be added gradually throughout the reaction, with equivalent results.
EXAMPLES 2-7
The following examples (Table I) illustrate blends prepared from different PVOH and MMA/NVP polymers.
TABLE I______________________________________COM- Designation of Blends - ExamplesPONENTS MMA/NVP Polymer 2 3 4 5 6 7______________________________________MMA-NVP Ex. 1a 20(Mw = 79.2K),MMA-NVP Ex. 1b 20(Mw = 96.3K)MMA-NVP Ex. 1c 20(Mw = 111K)MMA-NVP Ex. 1d 20 20 50(Mw = 150K)PVOH-1 80 80 80 80PVOH-2 80 50______________________________________
Mixtures were prepared by dry-blending in a polyethylene bag to yield a mixture of a 80:20 % weight ratio of PVOH to methyl methacrylate-co-N-vinyl pyrrolidone copolymer. The mixture was fed into the hopper of a single screw Killion extruder in which the mixture was melt compounded and extruded to form pellets at the following extrusion conditions: Extruder barrel temperatures: Zone-1: 204.degree. C., Zone-2: 210.degree. C., Zone-3: 216.degree. C.; Die temperatures: die-1: 218.degree. C., die-2: 221.degree. C.; screw speed=80 rpm. Torque conditions are reported in Table II.
(Note: Example 7 is a 50:50 blend of MMA/NVP copolymer 1d and poly(vinyl alcohol) PVOH-2.) In a blend such as Example 5, about 3% of water may be added to the blend at the time of processing; the water may be removed at a vacuum vent on the extruder, and further may be removed by careful drying of the pellets prior to molding or extruding into useful objects.
TABLE II______________________________________ PVOH-1Blend Example 2 3 4 7 (control)______________________________________Stable torque (N.m) 26 24 27 12 40Degradation time (sec.) 488 569 530 1756 356Degradation rate (N.m/min) 13 9 10 1 14______________________________________
In all cases, the blends exhibit a lower "stable torque" value indicative of easier processing, and lower degradation times, indicative of improved thermal stability in the melt.
EXAMPLES 8-19
In these examples are further illustrated the conversion from unstable torque to stable torque when the unstable PVOH samples are blended with the MMA/NVP copolymers from Example 1. Two other PVOH commercial samples are introduced into this experiment. PVOH-3 is AIRVOL.RTM.-165, a high range weight average molecular weight (Mw=124,000-186,000); Degree of saponification 99.3+mol %; Solution viscosity of 55-65 cPs (4% by weight, 20.degree. C.). PVOH-4 is a poly(vinyl alcohol) obtained from Aldrich Chemical Co., of intermediate range weight average molecular weight (Mw=77,000-79,000); degree of saponification 88 mol %. All blends in this series are with MMA/NVP copolymer of Example 1d, or repeat preparations of slightly different molecular weight.
The terms `Stable Melt` and `Unstable Melt` (Table III) refer to the appearance of the melted PVOH or PVOH/MMA/NVP copolymer blends. `Stable Melt` indicates that the molten polymer or blend did not develop the coarse lumps that are indicative of degradation and crosslinking, nor did it exhibit the surface pattern known as "melt fracture" as it emerged from the extruder die. `Unstable Melt` indicates a mixture of degradation, phase separation and cross-linking during the melt compounding and extrusion processes. The endothermic melting temperature (T.sub.m) was determined by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC).
TABLE III______________________________________ % COMP. Tm THERMALEX. POLYMER/BLEND (X:Y) (.degree.C.) STABILITY______________________________________ 8 PVOH-3 100/00 220.5 Unstable Melt 9 PVOH-2 100/00 167.1 Unstable Melt10 PVOH-1 100/00 158.3 Unstable Melt11 PVOH-4 100/00 151.3 Unstable Melt 6 PVOH-1/Ex. 1d 80/20 187.3 Stable Melt 7 PVOH-2/Ex. 1d 80/20 192.0 Stable Melt12 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 95/05 225.0 Unstable Melt13 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 90/10 -- Unstable Melt14 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 85/15 225.1 Stable Melt15 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 80/20 228.2 Stable Melt16 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 70/30 214.7 Stable Melt17 PVOH-3/Ex. 1d 65/35 216.4 Stable Melt18 PVOH-4/Ex. 1d 80/20 192.8 Stable Melt19 PVOH-4/Ex. 1d 40/60 171.7 Stable Melt______________________________________
EXAMPLES 20-34
These examples supply further indication of the range of compositions of PVOH and MMA/NVP useful in producing stable blends (Table IV). The other MMA/NVP copolymers were prepared by the process of Example 1; variations in the level of NVP were made to obtain the desired compositions. Variations in mercaptan were made to vary the molecular weights. PVOH-5 is AIRVOLCD-203, ultra low average molecular weight (Mw=13-23K); degree of saponification 87-89 mol %; solution viscosity of 3-4 cPs (4% by weight, aqueous solution at 20.degree. C.).
TABLE IV______________________________________ THER- POLYMER/ Wt. % MW of MAL BLEND MMA/NVP co- Tm STA-EX. (weight ratio) in copolymer polymer (.degree.C.) BILITY______________________________________20 PVOH-5 170.9 Unstable Melt21. PVOH-5/ 75/25 ca.160K 177.4 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)22. PVOH-5/ 75/25 " 189.7 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (3:2)23. PVOH-2/ 75/25 " 169.3 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)24. PVOH-2/ 75/25 " 170.3 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (2:3)25. PVOH-2/ 95/05 " 179.3 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (4:1)26. PVOH-2/ 90/10 " 180.5 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (4:1)27. PVOH-2/ 85/15 " 180.9 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (4:1)28. PVOH-2/ 80/20 " 180.4 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (4:1)29. PVOH-2/ 75/25 " 181.9 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (4:1)30. PVOH-1/ 95/05 39K 165.8 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)31. PVOH-1/ 90/10 " 163.8 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)32. PVOH-1/ 85/15 " 181.5 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)33. PVOH-1/ 80/20 " 180.7 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)34. PVOH-1/ 75/25 " 178.3 Stable (MMA/NVP) Melt (1:1)______________________________________
EXAMPLE 35
This example illustrates the effect on melt rheology (Table V) when blends of PVOH-1 or PVOH-2 and MMA/NVP (75/25 copolymer, MW 150,000 (Example 1d) are examined for melt viscosity vs. shear vs. the individual components of the blend. The results indicate a higher melt viscosity for the blends, both at low and high shear, which should result in a material less "soupy" in the melt and with more hot-strength upon processing into sheet or film. All values were obtained at 230.degree. C.
TABLE V______________________________________EXAMPLE SHEAR RATE VISCOSITYPOLYMER/BLEND (1/s) (Pa.s)______________________________________PVOH-1 1.171E(01) 2.778E(04)(control) 3.778E(01) 1.021E(04) 8.001E(01) 6.186E(03) 2.027E(02) 3.517E(03) 4.991E(02) 1.355E(03) 1.093E(03) 7.434E(02) 2.337E(03) 3.863E(02) 4.674E(03) 2.194E(02)Ex. 1d MMA-NVP = 3/1 1.120E(01) 5.596E(03)(Mw = 150K) 2.850E(01) 2.970E(03)control) 1.458E(02) 1.138E(03) 3.469E(02) 6.148E(02) 8.366E(02) 3.279E(02) 1.694E(03) 1.960E(02) 3.388E(03) 1.199E(02)5 PVOH-1//Ex. 1d (80//20) 1.172E(01) 1.825E(04) 3.407E(01) 7.430E(03) 7.503E(01) 4.622E(03) 1.535E(02) 2.853E(03) 3.242E(02) 1.715E(03) 8.777E(02) 8.626E(02) 2.262E(03) 3.788E(02) 4.525E(03) 2.142E(02)PVOH-2 1.250E(01) 1.628E(03)(control) 2.499E(01) 8.142E(02) 5.923E(01) 6.872E(02) 1.087E(02) 5.317E(02) 2.377E(02) 4.417E(02) 6.241E(02) 2.843E(02) 1.346E(03) 1.837E(02) 2.693E(03) 1.236E(02)6 PVOH-2//Ex. 1d (80//20) 1.016E(01) 2.644E(03) 2.229E(01) 2.264E(03) 5.802E(01) 1.655E(03) 1.241E(02) 1.160E(03) 2.845E(02) 7.239E(02) 7.053E(02) 4.213E(02) 1.561E(03) 2.471E(02) 3.122E(03) 1.522E(02)7 PVOH-2//Ex. 1d (50//50) 1.057E(01) 3.927E(03) 2.080E(01) 3.248E(03) 5.835E(01) 2.706E(03) 1.333E(02) 1.642E(03) 2.829E(02) 1.056E(03) 7.656E(02) 5.795E(02) 1.718E(03) 3.059E(02) 3.437E(03) 1.882E(02)______________________________________
EXAMPLE 36
This example presents physical and gas permeation properties (Table VI) for the MMA/N-VP copolymer of Example 1d and its blends with PVOH-2 in a 4:1 ratio. The table further gives data for blends of PVOH-2 with a similar MMA/N-VP copolymer, the blends being in a 1:1 and 2:3 ratio.
Pellets obtained from the extrusion process were also compression molded into thin films (3-5 mils) for oxygen permeability tests which were tested for oxygen permeability on a Mocon Ox-Tran 1000 unit, manufactured by Modern Controls, of Minneapolis, Minn. The films were mounted in the diffusion cells where they were first purged with nitrogen as a first step in establishing a base line. This was followed by exposing the upper surface of the film to an oxygen rich atmosphere and the lower surface to the carrier gas (1% H.sub.2 in N.sub.2). The transmission of oxygen at steady state was monitored and detected by a nickel cadmium fuel cell known as a Coulox Detector. The Ox-Tran 1000 unit was equipped to record the steady state flux in units of cc.mil/100in2.Atm. Day. Measurements were made at 23.degree. C. and 0% relative humidity unless otherwise stated.
The mechanical properties of the blend were evaluated with the aid of parts which were prepared by injection molding. The pelletized extrudates were dried in a forced air oven prior to injection molding on a 30 ton Newbury injection molding machine equipped with a heated, ASTM family mold. An injection pressure of 3790 kPa and a back pressure of 690 kPa was employed. The melt temperature may vary from 193.degree.-221.degree. C., depending on the viscosity of the polymer melt.
Injection molded parts were prepared from samples of the above listed compositions, and tested under ASTM procedures for the evaluation of physical properties of polymers. The ASTM test methods employed are as follows: Specific Gravity-D792-66 (re-approved 1979); Tensile-Yield, Elongation and Tensile Elastic Modulus-D638-84; Tensile Impact Strength ASTM D1822; Izod Impact--D256-84; Charpy Impact ASTM D256; Heat Deflection Temperature D648-72; Clash-Berg Torsional Modulus--D-1043; Oxygen Permeability ASTM D-3985. Results of the comparative example (MMA-NVP) and blends are given below in Table VI.
TABLE VI______________________________________Physical Properties of MMA-NVP = 75/25 Copolymer andPVOH/MMA-NVP = 75/25 Blends. EXAMPLESPHYSICAL MMA-NVP =PROPERTY 75/25 5 23 24______________________________________Specific 1.20 1.26 1.235 1.22GravityTensile-Yield, 76.8 114.3 94.0 78.4mPaElongation @ 4.15 57.00 -- 64.83Break %Tensile- 3287 4782 4382 4283Modulus, mPaTensile Impact 32.53 110.1 31.8 64.16Strength(kg.cm/sq.cm)Dynatup 23.2 26.2 19.8 21.0Impact Strength(kg.cms.)Notched Izod 1.96 2.39 3.54 1.96@ 0.0.degree. C.(kg.cms./cm.)Notched Izod 1.20 2.35 1.48 2.46@ 23.degree. C.(kg.cms./cm.)Unnotched Izod 3.03 6.89 3.80 5.8723.degree. C.(kg.cms./cm.)Unnotched 12.5 24.4 18.8Charpy(kg.cms/0.5cm2) 23.degree. C.Rockwell 100.75 103.15 100.90 95.1Hardness(unannealed),Rockwell 102.45 105.30 101.65 98.1Hardness(ann. 4 hrs.@ 80.degree. C.), MDTUFL 85.20 65.55 64.65 73.5(1820 kPa,2.degree. C./min.)(unannealed).degree.C.DTUFL 90.75 67.05 68.70 74.6(1820 kPa,2.degree. C./min.)(ann. 4 hrs.@ 80.degree. C.), .degree.C.CLASH-BERGTORSIONALMODULUS,kPa @ 40.degree. C. 272E(04) 273E(04) 142E(04) 109E(04)kPa @ 80.degree. C. 179E(04) 96E(03) 14E(04) 25E(04)Oxygen 8.76 0.0013 0.0013 0.0013Permeability@ 0%RH cc.mil/100in2.Day.Atm______________________________________
EXAMPLE 37
This example teaches the general method for preparing terpolymers of methyl methacrylate, N-vinyl pyrrolidone, and methacrylic acid. A terpolymer comprising 25 weight percent of NVP, 1 weight percent methacrylic acid (MAA), and the remainder MMA was prepared by an emulsion polymerization technique as follows: A monomer mixture was prepared, having methyl methacrylate: N-vinyl pyrrolidone: methacrylic acid ratio of 74:25:1. The mixture contained 4181 grams of MMA, 1412.5 grams of NVP, 56.5 grams of MAA, 67.8 grams of N-dodecyl mercaptan, 3363.4 grams of deionized water and 105.94 grams of a 10% aqueous sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate solution.
Each monomer mixture was polymerized according to the following procedure. To an appropriate glass vessel equipped with stirrer, heater, a reflux condenser, and nitrogen sparge tube, was added 7534.01 grams of deionized water, and 2.52 grams of sodium carbonate. The mixture was sparged for one hour with nitrogen while heating to 70.degree. C. The sparge rate was then changed to a sweep and 317.81 grams of a 10% aqueous solution of sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate was added to the mixture. The temperature of the reaction vessel was then raised to 85.degree. C. At this temperature, 126.07 mL of the initiator mixture, which consisted of 5.65 grams of sodium persulfate and 1633.27 grams of deionized water, was added to the reaction vessel. The monomer mixture was then fed into the reaction vessel over a three-hour period.
As the polymerization proceeded, the initiator mixture was added to the reaction vessel at the rate of 126.07 mL every 15 minutes. The accumulation of solids was measured every 30 minutes just before the addition of the initiator mixture. At the completion of the initiator and monomer addition the mixture was held at 85.degree. C. for one hour. The mixture was then cooled, filtered and the polymer isolated by coagulation with a 2% solution of magnesium acetate. The polymer was dried in a vacuum oven prior to blending experiments. The molecular weight of this polymer was about 50,000.
In a similar manner, many polymers of alkyl (meth)acrylates, unsaturated lactams or amides, and unsaturated acids may be prepared.
EXAMPLE 38
This example describes further preparations of co- and terpolymers examined as the second polymer component of blends with polymers of high vinyl alcohol content. It further lists other vinyl alcohol polymers incorporated into the study.
PVOH-6, commercially known as AIRVOL.RTM.-107 is a fully hydrolyzed (98.0-98.8 mol %) resin having a molecular weight of 31,000-50,000.
PVOH-7, commercially known as AIRVOL.RTM.-125 is a "super" hydrolyzed (99.3 mol %) resin having a molecular weight of 85,000-146,000.
PVOH-8, commercially known as AIRVOL.RTM.-325 is a fully hydrolyzed (98.0-98.8 mol %) resin having a molecular weight of 85,000-146,000.
PVOH-9, commercially known as AIRVOL.RTM.-350 is a fully hydrolyzed (98.0-98.8 mol %) resin having a molecular weight of 124,000-186,000.
Polymers of MMA with NVP and, in some instance methacrylic acid (MAA) were prepared by the methods of Examples 1 or 37. Example 38-I contains glycidyl methacrylate, rather than methacrylic acid (Table VII).
TABLE VII______________________________________Sample No.Preparation MMA NVP MAA MW______________________________________38-A 75 25 -- 140,00038-B 70 25 5 140,00038-C 75 25 -- 164,00038-D 74 25 1 164,00038-E 73 25 2 155,00038-F 72 25 3 131,00038-G 70 25 5 143,00038-H 68 25 7 --38-I 65 25 10* 143,00038-J 75 25 -- 147,00038-K 74 25 1 75,90038-L 72 25 3 71,50038-M 70 25 5 72,800______________________________________ *Example 38I contains glycidyl methacrylate, rather than methacrylic acid
The thermal properties (Table VIII) of blends in the systems: MMA-NVP, MMA-NVP-MAA/PVOH were investigated by melt mixing on the SYSTEM 90 TORQUE RHEOMETER (HAAKE RHEOCORD) and by DSC. The homopolymers and blends, listed in Table IX, were processed on the HAAKE RHEOCORD at a set temperature of 200.degree. C. and rotor rate of 80 RPM. The mixing time was ca. 30 minutes. The compositions are given in weight percent. As can be seen from the data listed in Table VIII, the thermal properties of some of the blends, exhibiting two T.sub.g s, are characteristic of polymer blends systems that are compatible but immiscible in the thermodynamic sense. The mixing torque behavior yields information on the thermal and rheological stability of the blends in the molten state. The main feature of these torque vs. time curves includes an initial sharp peak due to material loading and a stable plateau region. The torque value in the plateau region, termed "stable torque", Table IX, characterizes the viscous nature of the melt. The data listed in Table IX also provides information on the gain in thermal stability, represented as the time for "CHAR FORMATION", upon melt blending the acrylic terpolymer (MMA/NVP/MAA=75/25/05) and to a lesser extent the acrylic copolymer (MMA/NVP=75/25) with fully and partially hydrolyzed PVOH (PVOH-6 and PVOH-2).
It has previously been shown that the value of the stable torque and the rotor rate are directly related to the shear stress and shear rate respectively, in conventional viscometry. The gross features of the torque vs. time curves suggest that the association of (MMA/NVP=75/25), Ex. 38-A, with PVOH-2 hydrogen bonding leads to a polymer melt of higher viscosity than that calculated by the additivity rule for non-interacting mixtures.
An interesting feature of the acrylic copolymer/partially hydrolyzed PVOH blend is seen in the large positive deviation and subsequent stabilization of the torque at the end of the mixing period. A similar but greater positive deviation in torque is observed for the MMA-NVP-MAA, Ex. 38-B/PVOH-2 blend. A unique feature of the latter blend is seen in the rapid increase in torque in the 10-30 minutes mixing interval. This increase in torque may be attributed to grafting and or cross-linking via --COOH,--OH esterification reaction. Higher torque values are recorded during mixing, in the case of the MMA-NVP-MAA, Ex. 38-G/PVOH-6 system as compared to the MMA-NVP, Ex. 38-C/PVOH-6 system. A common characteristic of the blends of acrylic co- and terpolymers with fully hydrolyzed PVOH is the relatively stable torque attained throughout the entire thirty minutes of residence time in the HAAKE mixing bowl. Blends of both fully and partially hydrolyzed PVOH with the acrylic terpolymer (MMA-NVP-MAA) yielded higher mixing torque than blends of PVOH with the copolymer (MMA-NVP). One possible explanation for this observation is the formation of high molecular weight copolymers from the melts of (MMA/NVP/MAA) and PVOH. Another interesting observation obtained from samples of the (MMA-NVP-MAA=70/20/05)/PVOH polymer melt throughout the 30 minutes of HAAKE RHEOCORD melt-mixing is the absence of degradation in the form of charred particulates. Samples taken from the polymer melt appear to be similar in color to the similarly processed acrylic terpolymer, Table IX.
The following solvent fractionation scheme was prepared to calculate the percent of graft links and grafting efficiency of the (MMA-NVP-MAA) acrylic terpolymers: ##STR32##
The percent grafted PVOH and grafting efficiency of the acrylic terpolymer (MMA-NVP-MAA), calculated from the above scheme and listed in TABLE XI, are supported qualitatively by FTIR spectra. The FTIR spectra show increasing evidence of the presence of an ester carbonyl stretching frequency within the frequency range of 1726-1735 cm.sup.-1. It is noteworthy to mention that evidence of this ester is not discernible in either the FTIR spectrum of the acrylic terpolymer nor that of PVOH-6. Hence, we may conclude that this ester functionality may have resulted from the esterification reaction between the --OH of PVOH-6 and the --COOH of the acrylic terpolymer(MMA-NVP-MAA).
Another evidence of grafting is discernible from the increase in tensile-modulus with increasing percent graft (see Table X).
EXAMPLE 39
This example discloses typical blend conditions for blends reported in Tables VIII and IX.
PVOH and a copolymer of methyl methacrylate-N-vinyl pyrrolidone were dry blended in a polyethylene bag to yield a compound which consisted of a 80:20 % weight ratio of PVOH to methyl methacrylate-co-N-vinyl pyrrolidone copolymer. The mixture was fed into the hopper of a single screw Killion extruder in which the mixture was melt compounded and extruded at the following extrusion conditions:
______________________________________EXTRUDER BARREL TEMPERATURES: ZONE-1: 180.degree. C. ZONE-2: 193.degree. C. ZONE-3: 193.degree. C.DIE TEMPERATURES: DIE-1: 193.degree. C. DIE-2: 193.degree. C.SCREW SPEED: 80 RPM______________________________________
Other conditions may be used, depending on the viscosity of the blend, for example, a barrel setting of 390.degree.-400.degree. F. (200.degree.-204.degree. C.) and screw speed of 100 rpm (Examples 15 and 12), or 400.degree.-415.degree. F. (204.degree.-213.degree. C.) at 100 rpm (Examples 22-38).
T.sub.g and T.sub.m values are measured by differential scanning calorimetry. DH.sub.f is the heat of fusion calculated from the response.
TABLE VIII______________________________________Thermal Properties of Homopolymers andBlends in the Systems: (MMA-NVP),(MMA-NVP-MAA)/PVOH-6 and PVOH-2. Comp. T.sub.g T.sub.m DH.sub.fNo. Polymer/Blend (w/w) (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (J/g)______________________________________38-01 PVOH-6 100 75.29 221.58 74.3038-02 PVOH-2 100 69.29 167.11 37.1338-03 PVOH-8 100 77.55 225.77 69.0938-04 PVOH-9 100 78.26 226.87 65.9538-05 PVOH-3 100 74.93 224.97 48.4838-06 PVOH-7 100 66.80 221.96 86.5538-07 38-A 100 123.6038-08 38-D 100 117.8738-09 38-E 100 117.4038-10 38-F 100 135.3038-11 38-G 100 139.5038-12 38-H 100 144.3038-13 PVOH-2/38-A 80/20 72.79,115.95 187.80 26.4338-14 PVOH-2/38-G 80/20 66.76,114.84 191.24 27.5338-15 PVOH-6/38-A 80/20 74.14,116.01 225.29 63.2138-16 PVOH-6/38-D 80/20 74.13,113.44 214.95 62.0438-17 PVOH-6/38-E 80/20 73.01,115.20 213.65 65.2638-18 PVOH-6/38-F38-19 PVOH-6/38-G 80/20 74.25,116.07 214.34 58.7338-20 PVOH-6/38-H 80/2038-21 PVOH-6/38-I 80/20 71.80,112.04 225.23 67.9538-22 PVOH-8/38-A 80/20 76.70 224.03 49.2938-23 PVOH-8/38-D 80/20 76.47 224.11 56.3838-24 PVOH-8/38-E 80/20 78.17 228.32 54.0138-25 PVOH-8/38-F 80/20 78.58 226.40 58.6038-26 PVOH-8/38-G 80/20 77.33 225.70 66.0038-27 PVOH-9/38-A 80/20 77.59 225.32 49.2338-28 PVOH-9/38-D 80/20 76.81 225.32 54.1138-29 PVOH-9/38-F 80/20 78.66 226.70 59.8038-30 PVOH-9/38-G 80/20 78.33 224.50 62.4038-31 PVOH-3/38-A 80/20 74.27 217.72 33.8438-32 PVOH-3/38-D 80/20 74.11 220.68 41.5638-33 PVOH-3/38-F 80/20 73.78 219.40 37.5038-34 PVOH-3/38-G 80/20 75.51 220.0 49.0038-35 PVOH-7/38-A 80/20 74.37 224.49 46.7338-36 PVOH-7/38-D 80/20 76.36 226.11 51.4738-37 PVOH-7/38-F 80/20 77.91 225.90 57.7038-38 PVOH-7/38-G 80/20 78.23 226.10 59.40______________________________________
TABLE IX__________________________________________________________________________Thermal and Rheological Stability of PVOH and Blends at 200.degree. C. EXAMPLES 38- 1 2 7 11 13 14 15 19__________________________________________________________________________STABLE TORQUE (N.m) 6.6 8.5 12.3 10.6 11.2 12.1 9.1 12.9CHAR FORMATION (min.) 15.0 15.0 >30.0 >30.0 20.0 >30.0 20.0 >30.0__________________________________________________________________________
TABLE X______________________________________Physical Properties of Alloys of PVOH with(MMA-NVP-MAA) Acrylic Terpolymers. EXAMPLES 38- 15 16 17 19 21______________________________________Specific Gravity 1.28 1.28 1.28 1.29Tensile-Yield, kPa 0.00 0.00 0.00 132 0.00Elongation @ Break % 3.10 3.60 1.30 8.07 2.30Tensile-Modulus, mPa 5780 5319 6463 6896 5214Tensile Impact 4.57 6.69 7.74 7.31 3.11Strength (Joules/cm.sup.2)Dynatup Impact 3.66 1.59 1.7 1.86 2.6Strength (Joules)Notched Izod @ 0.degree. C. 1.85 1.68(kg-cm/cm of notch)Notched Izod @ 23.degree. C. 2.18 2.39 2.28 2.34 2.77(kg-cm/cm of notch)Unnotched Izod @ 23.degree. C. 8.72 8.53(Joules)Unnotched Charpy @ 23.degree. C. 22.8 18.0(Joules)Rockwell Hardness 96.15 97.35(unannealed), PRockwell Hardness 97.85 98.55(annealed 4 hrs. @ 80.degree. C.), PDTUFL (1,818 kPa, 2.degree. C./min.) 83.20 88.05(unannealed) .degree.C.),DTUFL (1,818 kPa, 2.degree. C./min.) 87.75 90.00(annealed 4 hrs. @ 80.degree. C.), .degree.C.Clash-Berg TorsionalModulus, mPa@ 40.degree. C. 3664 4580 4204 3893@ 80.degree. C. 679 706 774 890@ 120.degree. C. 133 153 184 243______________________________________
TABLE XI______________________________________Grafting of (MMA-NVP-MAA) onto PVOH-6 Initial Wt. of Percent Graft Wt. of PVOH After Graft EfficiencyExample PVOH (g) Grafting (g) (%) (%)______________________________________38-16 0.0798 0.0827 3.63 14.5038-17 0.0804 0.0881 9.58 38.5038-19 0.0800 0.0936 17.00 68.00______________________________________
EXAMPLE 40
This experiment describes the preparation of thin blown film from PVOH//MMA/NVP copolymers, and some of the mechanical properties of the films (Table XIII), noting that PVOH without the additive could not be processed into film under these conditions.
The material derived from Example 38-13 was successfully blown into thin (0.025 mm) film by the method described below and in Table XII:
The processing equipment consisted of the following components:
1) A one inch (25.4 mm.) Killion Extruder with a L/D of 24:1 and a screw design of the following dimensions:
Feed Zone=8D, Compression Zone=8D, and Metering Zone=8D.
This particular configuration was chosen to ensure that the polymer melt undergoes processing and mechanical homogenization at the lowest possible temperature.
2) A melt filter that consisted of four screens (40, 60, 80 and 40 mesh ASTM) was placed between the extruder and the blowing head for the purpose of restricting the passage of foreign bodies.
3) The die design was of the spiral mandrel type geometry.
This design favors high throughput and adequate efficiency. The polymer melt enters the die axially and leaves through four radial ports located just above the base of the die. From the port exits, the molten polymer flows along the helices of the spiral mandrel to the annular die lip. The die land was 12.7 mm. in length and the gap was set at 7.62 mm.
4) Cooling ring and vertical blown film tower. The former device serves the purpose of cooling the bubble to a reasonable temperature before the film comes into contact with the nip roll assembly that is housed in the blown film tower.
5) Haul-off Unit. This unit comprises of a pair of collapsing frames and haul-off or squeeze rolls.
TABLE XII______________________________________Typical Screw Design and Extrusion Conditions forFilm-Blowing of Composition from EXAMPLE 38-13MATERIAL EXAMPLE 38-13______________________________________ZONE-1 .degree.C. 210 204 204ZONE-2 .degree.C. 210 207 207ZONE-3 .degree.C. 216 207 207ZONE-4 .degree.C. 216 207 207DIE-1 .degree.C. 210 207 210DIE-2 .degree.C. 210 207 210SCREW RPM 55 30 30AMPS 10 11 11MELT, .degree.C. 237 218 219PRESSURE kPa 27560 33070 32380TOP NIP SPEED, MPM 5.59 5.52 5.55BLOWER PRESSURE, kPa 172 172 172WINDER SPEED, MPM 6.1 6.1 6.1FILM:THICKNESS (mm.) .025 .025 .025LAY FLAT (mm.) 152 152 152______________________________________
TABLE XIII______________________________________Mechanical Properties of Thin Films Fromthe Composition Designated as EXAMPLE 38-13PROPERTY UNITS EXAMPLE 38-13______________________________________TEAR RESISTANCE kg/mm. 52.2(MD) kg/mm. 95.3(TD)TEAR PROPAGATION kg/mm. 0.53(MD)RESISTANCE kg/mm. --(TD)ELONGATION @ BREAK % 64.00(MD) % 5.80(TD)TENSILE MODULUS mPa 84.06(MD) mPa 591.10(TD)______________________________________
EXAMPLE 41
This example describes co-injection stretch blow molding experiments of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) with several barrier resins, including the PVOH//MMA/NVP blend of Example 38-13. The oxygen permeability performance of the laminated resins containing the blend of the present invention is comparable with the other laminates and improved over the monolithic PET. The co-injection stretch blow molding method was carried out as follows:
a) Resin A (PET) was injected from an extruder into a vertically mounted mold;
b) Resin B (Barrier Layer) was then injected concentrically and circularly into the mold cavity;
c) The parison, thus formed, was rotated to a conditioning pot where it was conditioned at a temperature of 230.degree. C. for 10 seconds;
d) Conditioning was followed by simultaneous stretching and blowing of the parison into an 8-ounce bottle.
The barrier resins chosen were Nylon MXD-6, a poly(m-xylylenediamine adipate), and EVAL-T-102A, believed to be an ethylene-vinyl alcohol polymer containing ca. 32 mol % ethylene. Molding conditions for the co-injection molding are given in Table XIV and permeability data in conventional permeability units in Table XV. The blend used is that of Example 38-13, containing one weight percent of octadecyl di-t-butylhydroxyhydrocinnamate antioxidant.
TABLE XIV______________________________________Processing Conditions for the Co-injection Molding ofPET with each of the Following Resins: Nylon MXD-6,EVAL-T102A and EX. 38-13Items Units PET MXD-6 EVAL-T EX. 13______________________________________Cylinder: .degree.C. 250 250 200 200 .degree.C. 270 250 200 200 .degree.C. 270 250 200 200Nozzle .degree.C. 270 240 220 220Temp.Shot Size cc/sec 30 12 6 6Injection kg/cm 2 150,40,35 145,140,145 145,110,115PressureVelocity cc/sec. 13,13,13 10,10,17 45,45,45Injection sec. 6.3 6.3 6.3 6.0TimeCooling sec. 6.0 6.0 6.0 6.0TimeCavity .degree.C. 60.0 60.0 60.0 60.0Temp.Cycle sec. 29.3 29.3 29.3 29.3TimePot .degree.C. 230.0 230.0 230.0 230.0Temp.______________________________________
TABLE XV______________________________________Comparison of the Oxygen Permeability Measurements ofMonolithic and multilayer PET 8-ounce Bottles.COMPOSITION PERMEABILITY (cc/Pack/Day)______________________________________PET 0.0253PET/NYLON-MXD-6/PET 0.0187PET/EVAL-T102A/PET 0.0058PET/Ex.38-13/PET 0.0153______________________________________
EXAMPLE 42
In this experiment are reported the preparation of ternary multilayer composites from sheet co-extrusion, and a comparison of the oxygen permeability which shows improved barrier properties for the laminates containing the blends of the present invention, even at thinner film usage, over ethylene-vinyl alcohol polymer.
The co-extrusion was carried out with the aid of a simple feed block design. In this design a second melt stream is introduced from an extruder which is mounted perpendicular to a main or central extruder such that the melted polymer emitting from the central extruder becomes encapsulated by the melt from the second extruder. Because of the drastic difference in the thermal and rheological characteristics of the substrate (PET) and core layer (MMA-NVP-MAA)/PVOH alloy, care was taken in selecting the respective extruder screws. The screw designs chosen were as follows:
1) Extruder one was equipped with a single stage metering type screw, the metering section being 30% of the total length of the screw;
2) Extruder two was fitted with a two stage mixing and plastication screw.
The latter screw was chosen in order to facilitate the melting and homogenizing of the partially crystalline PET resin. The former screw configuration enabled the (MMA-NVP-MAA)/PVOH alloy to attain the necessary melt consistency without the occurrence of severe degradation due to processing.
Both the PET homopolymer and the `barrier` alloy was thoroughly dried before being fed into the hopper of the respective extruders, to prevent undue degradation of the viscosity and the concomitant loss of favorable physical properties. PET was dried at 120.degree. C. in a vacuum oven. The alloy was also dried at 80.degree. C. in a vacuum oven. The thickness of the core layer was varied from 1.5 to 5 mils, 1 mil being 0.025 mil. The substrate or skin layers was varied follows; thickness of each layer: 3, 5, 7, 9, 12 and 14 mils.
The oxygen permeability of the multilayer films are reported in Table XVI.
TABLE XVI______________________________________Oxygen Permeability of Multilayer Composites. THICKNESSCOMPOSITE (mil) PERM.*______________________________________PET/(EVAL-T102A)/PET 13.5 0.4185PET/(PVOH-2/38-A = 80/20)/PET 4.5 0.1535PET/(PVOH-2/38-D = 90/10)/PET 6.5 0.2959PET/(PVOH-2/38-F = 80/20)/PET 10.3 0.4212PET/(PVOH-2/38-G = 90/10)/PET 9.0 0.3336______________________________________ *cc.mil/(100 in2.Day.Atm.)
EXAMPLE 43
In a manner similar to Example 37, copolymers of methyl methacrylate/N-vinylpyrrolidone/copolymerizable acid may be prepared and isolated, such as:
MMA/NVP/methacrylic acid=94/5/1
MMA/NVP/methacrylic acid=90/5/5
MMA/NVP/methacrylic acid=90/9/1
MMA/NVP/methacrylic acid=79/20/1
MMA/NVP/acrylic acid=94/5/1
MMA/NVP/acryloxypropionic acid=90/5/5
MMA/butyl/acrylate/vinyl acetamide/glycidyl methacrylate=48/40/10/2
MMA/ethyl acrylate/acrylamide/maleic anhydride=20/74/5/1.
They may be blended with PVOH as in Example 38, and processed into useful films by methods similar to those taught in Example 39.
EXAMPLE 44
In this Example is reported the utility of the additive polymers of the present invention in improving the modulus of soft polymers containing units derived from vinyl alcohol and alkyleneoxy (meth)acrylates.
The commercial resins known as Vinex.TM. are supplied by Air Products Co., Allentown, Pa. Their exact analysis is not known; they are believed to contain units derived from vinyl alcohol and from an alkyleneoxy methacrylate. VINEX.TM.-1007 and -2025 differ chemically the amounts of vinyl acetate and alkyleneoxymethacrylate co-monomers. VINEXT.TM.-1007 contains a significantly higher level of vinyl alcohol mers than VINEXT.TM.-2025. They also appear to contain varying amounts of an external plasticizer, probably glycerol, to confer melt processability. The plasticizer sometimes exudes after processing, an undesirable effect. This difference in chemical composition manifests itself in the thermal and mechanical properties of the resins.
The acrylic copolymers (MMA-NVP 75/25) and (MMA-NVP=85/15) were prepared as described previously from commercially available monomers, being similar to the additive polymers described in Examples 21 and 27, respectively. The admixed materials were prepared from dry blends of acrylic copolymer and VINEX.TM. resin followed by extrusion in a single screw Killion extruder at temperatures ranging from 204.degree. C. to 210.degree. C., and a screw speed of 80 RPM. The extrudates were pelletized and dried prior to evaluation of thermal and mechanical properties. Testing was done as in earlier examples, such as Example 38. The very high tensile impact for Example 43-1 is related to its low modulus and glass temperature, it being an almost rubbery material.
The thermal properties of the blends (Table XVII) suggest that the acrylic copolymers exhibit a high degree of compatibility with the VINEX.TM. resins. Evidence of this compatibility may be inferred from the single T.sub.g s of the binary blends. The mechanical properties of the VINEX.TM. resins are also significantly improved by the addition of a minimum of 10 weight percent of the acrylic copolymer (MMA-NVP)(Table XVIII).
TABLE XVII______________________________________Thermal Properties of Acrylic Copolymers,VINEX .TM. Resins and Blends of the same. T.sub.g T.sub.m DH.sub.fEX. 44- Composition (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (J/g)______________________________________1007 VINEX .TM. 35.0 211.5 61.82025 VINEX .TM. 44.4 180.4 41.13. (MMA-NVP = 75/25) 124.94. (MMA-NVP = 85/15) 120.55. (EX.1/EX.3 = 90/10) 40.1 211.5 57.86. (EX.1/EX.3 = 80/20) 44.4 213.5 51.37. (EX.1/EX.4 = 90/10) 35.3 210.3 55.68. (EX.1/EX.4 = 80/20) 37.0 211.8 56.89. (EX.2/EX.3 = 90/10) 46.0 188.3 28.710. (EX.2/EX.3 = 80/20) 48.3 189.1 28.411. (EX.2/EX.4 = 90/10) 44.8 188.0 31.412. (EX.2/EX.4 = 80/20) 45.7 187.8 28.2______________________________________
TABLE XVIII______________________________________1007 andand Mechanical Properties of VINEX .TM.Blends of the Same with Acrylic Copolymers:(MMA-NVP = 85/15) & (MMA-NVP = 75/25). EXAMPLESPROPERTY 44-1 44-5 44-6 44-7 44-8______________________________________SPECIFIC GRAVITY 1.303 1.296 1.285 1.295 1.288Tg (.degree.C.) 35.0 40.1 44.4 35.3 37.0TENSILE-YIELD, mPa 7.8 41.0 0.000 41.2 36.5ELONGATION @ BREAK % 259.3 68.4 3.0 61.7 19.0TENSILE-MODULUS mPa 241 1707 2172 1791 1733TENSILE IMPACT 124 1.5 1.8 1.4 0.85STRENGTH (J/cm.sup.2)DYNATUP IMPACT 3.58 3.37 2.60 3.34 2.28STRENGTH (Joules)NOTCHED IZOD @ 0.0.degree. C. 0.24 0.44 0.31 0.33 0.36(J/cm)NOTCHED IZOD @ 23.degree. C. 0.94 0.48 0.44 0.48 0.42(J/cm)DTUFL (264 psi, 2.degree. C./min.) 45.15 51.05 57.05 54.85 57.75(unannealed.) .degree.C.DTUFL (264 psi, 2.degree. C./min.) 51.00 64.70 72.40 62.25 66.50(ann.) .degree.C.CLASH-BERG TORSIONALMODULUS,mPa @ 40.degree. C. 532 815 1167 837 880mPa @ 80.degree. C. 278 276 393 285 337mPa @ 120.degree. C. 88.7 73.2 70.5 88.5 61.9______________________________________
EXAMPLE 45
In this Example is reported the utility of the additive polymers of the present invention in improving the clarity of polymers containing units derived from vinyl alcohol and alkyleneoxy (meth)acrylates.
Similar improvements in physical properties are obtained from melt blends of an acrylic terpolymer (MMA-NVP-MAA=74/25/01), similar to that described in Example 37, with VINEX.TM.. One interesting observation that is notable of the latter alloys is the optical clarity of the extrudates derived from blends with VINEXT.TM.-2025 and VINEXT.TM.-2034, a polymer similar to the other VINEX.TM. materials noted, and also of unknown specific composition, for ratios of 1:9 and 1:4 respectively. This clarity is noteworthy because the extrudates of unmodified VINEX.TM.-2025 and VINEX-2034.TM. are both opaque in appearance.
EXAMPLE 46
In this Example is reported the way removal of sodium acetate is accomplished and glycerol is incorporated. Prior to melt compounding in a single screw extruder, a free flowing powder blend is prepared by the following procedure:
1. The PVOH or PVOH blend is introduced into the mixing bowl of a high intensity mixer (Welex/Henschel).
2. The PVOH granules are heated to a constant temperature of 37.degree. C. at the fixed rate of agitation attained at 800-900 RPM for 5 minutes.
3. The RPM is decreased to zero and a mixture consisting of glycerol and phosphoric acid (H.sub.3 PO.sub.4), or the H.sub.3 PO.sub.4 alone, is added to the PVOH powder. The mixing process is continued at 400-450 RPM for 10 minutes.
4. The RPM is again decreased to zero and the acrylic powder is added to the mixture which is then continually agitated at about 400-450 RPM.
5. The free flowing powder is collected and stored in polyethylene bags.
The particular PVOH polymers used in these following examples are obtained commercially. PVOH-10 (AIRVOL (R)-321) is a fully hydrolyzed PVOH resin of solution viscosity ranging from 16.5 to 20.5 cPs and Mw ranging from about 93 to 150k. PVOH-11 (ELVANOL (R) 51-05) is a low solution viscosity (5-6 cPs), gel resistant, partially hydrolyzed (87-89 mol %) PVOH resin. PVOH-12 (ELVANOL (R) 90-50) is a medium-low viscosity (12-15 cPs), super hydrolyzed PVOH resin. In those cases where data for the PVOH samples without acrylic polymer is reported, the samples are not treated with phosphoric acid, except for Example 48-16, below.
The low molecular weight partially hydrolyzed PVOH//acrylic composites, prepared by the previously described dry blending procedure, are fed into the hopper of a single screw Killion extruder in which the mixtures are melt compounded and extruded at the following extrusion conditions: extruder barrel: zone 1, 180.degree. C., all other zones and dies 193.degree. C., screw speed=80 RPM. The pelletized extrudates are dried in a forced air oven prior to injection molding in an Arburg injection molding machine equipped with a heated ASTM family mold. The molding conditions are as follows: molder temperatures: 200.degree. C.; injection pressure 6.2 mPa; back pressure 1.4 mPa; mold temperature 24.degree. C.
For low and medium molecular weight fully hydrolyzed PVOH and their composites with the acrylic polymer. Killion extrusion conditions are barrel temperatures ranging from 199.degree.-216.degree. C., die temperatures of 210.degree. C., and screw speed of 80 RPM. The molding conditions are as follows: molder temperatures: nozzle 226.degree. C., zones 1 235.degree. C., zones 2 and 3 240.degree. C.; injection pressure 6.6 mPa; back pressure 1.4 mPa; mold temperature 35.degree. C.
EXAMPLE 47
This example describes preparation of film extrudates. Essentially, they are carried out as in Example 40, except a cooling ring is not required. The compositions defined by EX. 48-21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29 and 30 are extrusion blown into thin films. Large numbers of gels with observed in control films without the acrylic additive.
TABLE XIX______________________________________TYPICAL SCREW DESIGNAND EXTRUSION CONDITIONSEX-TRUDERCON- EXAMPLESDITIONS 21 22 23 24 25 26 29 30______________________________________ZONE-1, 202 202 202 202 202 202 202 202.degree.C.ZONE-2, 213 213 213 213 213 213 213 213.degree.C.ZONE-3, 218 218 213 213 213 213 216 232.degree.C.ZONE-4, 218 218 216 216 216 216 221 235.degree.C.DIE-1, .degree.C. 218 218 216 216 216 216 224 235DIE-2, .degree.C. 218 218 216 216 216 216 224 235SCREW 30 30 40 30 45 30 30 30RPMAMPS 5 6 5 5 5 7 7 7MELT 225 226 220 219 220 219 224 221TEMP..degree.C.DIE 2500 3590 3480 4160 2970 3300 3510 2940PRES-SUREpsiTOP NIP 6 8 5 5 6 5 7 7SPEEDFPMBLOWER- 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0PRES-SUREpsiWINDER 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15SPEEDFPMFILM 1.5-2 1.5 2.1 2.0 2.2 2 2 1.6THICK-NESS(mils.)LAY 10-15 14 14 12 12 12 10 9FLAT(inches)______________________________________
EXAMPLE 48
In this Example are reported properties for the starting materials for a series of blends of a tetrapolymer of methyl methacrylate/N-vinyl pyrrolidone/alkyl acrylate/methacrylic acid with admixtures of two poly(vinyl alcohols), for blends of a terpolymer of methyl methacrylate/N-vinyl pyrrolidone/methacrylic acid with other poly(vinyl alcohols), the blends being with and without glycerol. The plasticizing effect of glycerol can be seen in general with the decrease of Tg. Acrylic polymers with low levels of acid, and the use of acrylic polymers at use levels as low as 4% in the blend are within these examples.
TABLE XX______________________________________Thermal Properties ofHomopolymers and Blends in the System:P(MMA-NVP-MA-MAA)/PVOH-6/PVOH-10/glycerol.EX. POLYMER/ COMP. Mw Tg Tm CRYST.48 BLEND (% w/w) (k) (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (%)______________________________________1. PVOH-6 100 31-50 75.29 221.58 47.572. PVOH-10 100 72.81 222.77 46.913. P(MMA/NVP/ 100 197 104.28 MA/MAA = (56/25/18/01)4. 48-1/48-2/ 65/22/ -- 49.06 220.58 42.55 48-3/glycerol 6.5/6.55. 48-1/48-2/ 63/20.5/ -- 52.01; 221.57 41.06 48-3/glycerol 10/6.5 76.826. 48-1/48-2/ 59/19.5/ -- 39.19; 217.07 35.26 48-3/glycerol 15/6.5 71.347. 48-1/48-2/48-3 64/21/15 -- 74.97; 226.49 44.80 101.018. 48-1/48-2 75/25 -- 74.84 227.60 50.97______________________________________
TABLE XXI______________________________________Thermal Properties ofHomopolymers and Blends in the System:P(MMA-NVP-MAA)/PVOH-2/glycerol.EX. POLYMER/ COMP. Mw Tg Tm CRYST.48 BLEND (% w/w) (k) (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (%)______________________________________ 9. PVOH-2 100 31-50 68.26 173.42 21.4710. P(MMA-NVP- 100 123 133.77 MAA = 72/25/03)11. 48-9/48-10/ 87/6.5/ -- 50.68 183.60 24.89 glycerol 6.512. 48-9/48-10/ 90/05/05 -- 54.31 185.82 25.26 glycerol13. 48-9/48-10/ 89.5/6.5/ -- 55.76 184.89 25.52 glycerol 0414. 48-9/48-10 94.5/6.5 -- 67.54 190.78 28.3815. 48-9/48-10 95/05 -- 67.61 190.59 28.2916. 48-9 100 -- 67.05 194.28 29.45______________________________________
TABLE XXII______________________________________Thermal Properties ofHomopolymers and Blends in the System:P(MMA-NVP-EA-MAA)/PVOH-2/PVOH-11/glycerol.EX. POLYMER/ COMP. Mw Tg Tm CRYST.48 BLEND (% w/w) (k) (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (%)______________________________________17. PVOH-2 100 31-50 68.26 173.42 21.4718. PVOH-11 100 31-50 68.35 170.58 18.0719. P(MMA-NVP- 100 98.11 EA-MAA = 56/25/18/01)20. P(MMA-NVP- 100 101.55 EA-MAA = 55/25/18/02)21. 48-17/48-19/ 90/05/05 -- 52.02 186.24 26.11 glycerol22. 48-17/48-19 95/05 -- 67.35 191.50 28.2423. 48-17/48-20/ 92/04/04 -- 58.52 192.64 26.88 glycerol24. 48-17/48-20 96/04 -- 69.75 194.53 28.7125. 49-18/48-20/ 92/04/04 -- 58.57 188.93 26.88 glycerol26. 49-18/48-20 96/04 -- 68.21 192.89 28.25______________________________________
TABLE XXIII______________________________________Thermal Properties of Homopolymers and Blendsin the system: P(MMA-NVP-EA-MAA)/PVOH-6/PVOH-10/PVOH-12/glycerol.EX. POLYMER/ COMP. Mw Tg Tm CRYST.48 BLEND (% w/w) (k) (.degree.C.) (.degree.C.) (%)______________________________________27. PVOH-12 100 -- 70.42 224.30 58.6428. P(MMA-NVP- 100 105.05 EA-MAA = 54/25/18/03)29. EX.27/EX.20/ 90/05/05 -- 66.25 224.34 45.73 glycerol30. EX.1/EX.2/ 67.5/ -- 58.77 220.98 45.67 EX.28/glycerol 22.5/5/531. EX.1/EX.2/ 71/24/5 -- 76.55 227.08 50.90 EX.28______________________________________
EXAMPLE 49
In this Example are reported properties of certain of the blends of Example 48 which relate to the toughness, heat distortion temperature, and elongation of the blends. The effect of glycerol is to reduce the tensile properties and improve the impact strength.
TABLE XXIV______________________________________Physical Properties of Blends in the System:P(MMA-NVP-MA-MAA)/PVOH-6/PVOH-10/glycerol. EXAMPLES 48-PHYSICAL PROPERTY 4 5 6 7______________________________________SPECIFIC GRAVITY 1.30 1.30 1.29 1.29TENSILE-YIELD, mPa 65.90 64.61 43.77 116.17ELONGATION @ 172.25 170.00 191.25 33.43BREAK %TENSILE-MODULUS, gPa 3.12 3.17 1.26 6.22DYNATUP IMPACT 2.67 2.93 3.31 2.48STRENGTH (J)NOTCHED IZOD @ 0.degree. C. 43.79 46.99 40.58 --(J/m)NOTCHED IZOD @ 23.degree. C. 44.86 48.59 55.00 28.30(J/m)DTUFL (1.8 mPa, 2.degree. C./min) 58.15 57.35 52.30 78.15(unannealed) .degree.C.DTUFL (1.8 mPa, 2.degree. C./min) 56.95 59.90 57.00 86.45(ann. 4 hrs. @ 80.degree. C.), .degree.C.______________________________________
TABLE XXV______________________________________Physical Properties of Blends in the System:P(MMA-NVP-MAA)/PVOH-2/glycerol. EXAMPLES 48-PHYSICAL PROPERTY 11 12 13 14 15______________________________________TENSILE-YIELD, mPa 21.16 36.23 49.08 81.51 82.40ELONGATION @ BREAK % 67.90 88.90 68.20 75.50 86.43TENSILE-MODULUS, gPa 0.96 1.82 2.6 74.84 4.80DYNATUP IMPACT 4.0 43.5 33.5 52.93 2.02STRENGTH (J)NOTCHED IZOD @ 23.degree. C. 42.19 37.38 38.45 24.03 29.37(J/m)______________________________________
TABLE XXVI______________________________________TEAR AND IMPACT RESISTANCE OFEXTRUSION BLOWN FILM SAMPLES EXAMPLES 48-PROPERTY 21 22 23 24 25 26 30 31______________________________________TEARSTRENGTHMD mN/mil 156.0 14.7 24.2 13.3 25.0 10.4 18.6 16.7TD mN/mil 165.5 20.7 18.7 9.8 28.3 16.7 10.6 15.5DART 0.29 0.26 0.26 0.24 0.09 0.03 0.25 0.06DROP,J/mil______________________________________
TABLE XXVII______________________________________TEAR AND IMPACT RESISTANCE OFEXTRUSION CAST FILM SAMPLES EXAMPLES 48-PROPERTY 8 16 22 23 24 26 30 31______________________________________TEARSTRENGTHMD mN/mil 8.2 18.3 8.6 30.7 7.8 13.5 54.0 15.7TD mN/mil 20.0 31.0 18.6 49.5 34.0 12.3 42.5 27.5DART 0.06 0.08 0.17 0.21 0.06 0.17 0.46 0.20DROPJ/mil______________________________________
EXAMPLE 51
In this Example are reported extensional viscosities for certain of the blends in Example 48. The data indicate the improvement imparted by the presence of 5% of the acrylic additive, and the further effect of glycerol when a low MW PVOH is utilized.
TABLE XXVIII______________________________________EXTENSIONAL VISCOSITY OF BLENDS CONSISTINGOF PVOH AND THE ACRYLIC TETRAPOLYMER:P(MMA-NVP-EA-MAA). EXAMPLES 48- 22 16 24 23 29______________________________________DIE 199 199 199 199 232TEMPERATURE.degree.C.VISCOSITY (Pa.s) 58238 51050 43325 25988 70313______________________________________
EXAMPLES 52-53
The adhesive compositions listed in TABLE XXIX were prepared from powder blends, which were comprised of the following ingredients: PVOH, acrylic tetrapolymer, 0.66% (based on the weight of PVOH) of a 85 weight percent H.sub.3 PO.sub.4 aqueous solution, 0.5 weight percent of tetrakis(methylene (3,5-di-t-butyl-4-hydroxyhydrocinnamate)) methane antioxidant and (optionally) glycerol. The compositions were melt compounded in a single screw extruder at temperatures ranging from 180.degree.-193.degree. C. and subsequently pelletized. The adhesiveness of each alloy was evaluated by re-melting the pellets in the extruder employed in the melt compounding step and applying the molten resin between the overlapping surface of two strips of cardboard to form a single lap joint. The tensile strength of the joint was tested by ASTM D3932-80 method. The strips were pulled on a Zwick tensile tester at a rate of 5.5 inches per minute. The observed adhesion is the pound force per inch (lbf/in) or Newton per meter (N/m) required to pull the lap joint apart.
EXAMPLES 54-59
The adhesive compositions defined as examples 55-57 were prepared by the technique described in examples 52-53. The compositions illustrate that increasing amounts of the acrylic terpolymer in the alloys have little effect on the adhesiveness of the PVOH-acrylic alloys. The data listed in TABLE XXIX show that the tensile strength of compositions 55-57 remains unchanged with increasing levels of acrylic terpolymer. Example 54 demonstrates the efficacy of acid neutralized PVOH as a hot melt adhesive. However, it was observed that the thermal stability of the unmodified PVOH was inferior to that of the acrylic modified PVOH. Examples 58 and 59 show that alloys comprising of equal weights of the specified acrylic ter- and tetrapolymers appear to exhibit slightly higher tensile strength than alloys which comprise a single acrylic ter- or tetrapolymer.
TABLE XXIX______________________________________Hot Melt Formulation Applied to CardboardPOLYMER/COM- EXAMPLESPOSITION 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59______________________________________AIRVOL-205 95 90ELVANOL- 100 96 92 90 96 925105GLYCEROL 00 05P(MMA- 05 05NVP-EA-MAA =56/25/18/01)P(MMA- 02 04NVP-EA-MAA =55/25/18/02)P(MMA- 00 04 08 10 02 04NVP-MAA =74/25/01),Mw = 10kADHESION 55.2 54.5 54.1 56.0 54.3 54.9 62.4 59.2(lbf/inch)______________________________________
TABLE XXX______________________________________Hot Melt Formulation Applied to Cardboard and Plywood EXAMPLESPOLYMER/COMPOSITION 60 61 62 63______________________________________AIRVOL-107 67.5 71.2 COMMERCIAL HOT MELTAIRVOL-321 22.5 23.8 ADHESIVEGLYCEROL 05 00P(MMA-NVP-EA-MAA = 05 0554/25/18/03)ADHESION (lbf/inch) 63.4 108.0 65.4 98.6______________________________________
Claims
  • 1. In the process of applying a poly(vinyl alcohol) polymer as a hot melt adhesive to a paper, wood, or other cellulosic substrate, the composition comprising more than about 90% units of the structure ##STR33## and a. blending from about 2 to about 20 parts of
  • (i) at least one second polymer containing from about 5 to about 35 parts of units of the structure ##STR34## wherein n is 2, 3, 4, or 5, R.sub.4 and R.sub.5 may be the same or different and are H, C.sub.1 -C.sub.4 alkyl, or --C.sub.2 H.sub.4 --(O--C.sub.2 H.sub.4)-- in a cyclic form, and where R.sub.6 is a urea or cyclic ureido structure of the formula ##STR35## from about 64 to about 4 parts of units of the structure ##STR36## wherein R.sub.2 is C.sub.1 -C.sub.4 alkyl; and from about 1 to about 10 parts of a copolymerizable unsaturated acid, anhydride or glycidyl-containing ester; and
  • (ii) from about 2 to about 20 parts of at least one plasticizer wherein the poly(vinyl alcohol) polymer is washed with water or treated with an organic or inorganic acid to remove essentially all sodium acetate residue;
  • b. melting the polymer blend formed in step (a);
  • c. applying the polymer blend melt of step (b) to at least one paper, wood, or other cellulosic article surface.
  • 2. The process of claim 1 wherein the plasticizer is polyethylene glycol, neopentyl glycol, 2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentanediol or glycerol.
Parent Case Info

This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 161,643, filed 2 Dec. 1993 which has been patented and which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 981,570, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,322,892 filed Nov. 25, 1992 which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 781,715, filed Oct. 22, 1991 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,189,097, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 623,854, filed Dec. 7, 1990, now abandoned.

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Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 161643 Dec 1993
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 781715 Oct 1991
Continuation in Parts (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 981570 Nov 1992
Parent 623864 Dec 1990