M. Pacia et Fp. La Mantia, Influence of small amounts of polyvinylchloride on the recycling of polyethyleneterephthalate, POLYM DEGR, 63(1), 1999, pp. 11-14
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), and polyvinyl chloride (PVC), are commonl
y encountered in plastics stream coming from separate collections of plasti
c bottles. The presence of PVC in the recycled PET is very dangerous becaus
e of the chain scission provoked by the hydrogen chloride evolved from the
macromolecules during degradation of PVC. Recycled PET must be free of PVC;
contents of PVC as little as 100 ppm can induce degradation and discolorat
ion of the polyester. PET, in its turn, is degraded when the processing is
carried out in the presence of water. In previous work, however, the degrad
ation of PET was eliminated and rather an increase of the molecular weight
has been measured when the processing was carried out under nitrogen atmosp
here. In this work PVC-contaminated PET has been processed under nitrogen f
low and the results indicate that a competition between degradation and reg
radation occurs in these processing conditions and, if the PVC content is l
ower than 2000 ppm, not only no macroscopic change of the molecular weight
is observed, but some increase is measured that increases on decreasing the
PVC content. Moreover, the measure of the torque during processing and the
good reproducibility of these tests allow us to detect the amount of PVC i
n recycled PET samples. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.