The pulmonary effects of acute (30 min) and chronic (7, 14, or 21 days; 30 min day !1 ) exposure to smoke from white polycarbonate structural foam, or a Ni-urethane coated version of this plastic, were analyzed by exposing groups of 4 mice in a dome chamber apparatus. The lungs of test fatalities we
Volatile combustion products of polycarbonate and polysulfone
β Scribed by Gwendolyn L. Ball; E. A. Boettner
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1972
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 447 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Thermal analysis of polycarbonate and polysulfone has shown each plastic to undergo a two-step decomposition, the rst step involving production of high-boiling chain scission and volatile products, the second resulting, in addition, in production of large amounts of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide. Ten to fifteen volatile products-of each plastic have been quantitatively analyzed under several combustion conditions and also in several temperature ranges chosen on the basis of TGA curves. Polycarbonate products include a moderate amount of methane, small amounts of other aliphatic hydrocarbons through C5, methanol, acetaldehyde, and several aromatics. Volatile products account for 4 @ -6 0 % of polycarbonate, with phenol and substituted phenols predominating in the large amount of liquid residue formed during chain scission. Polysulfone produces very similar hydrocarbon products as well as sulfur dioxide, which accounts for 8546% of the sulfur of the plastic, and carbonyl sulfide, which was only detectable during the temperature range 490"-550OC. Volatile products account for 50-60y0 of polysulfone.
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