Polythene
Polythene
Polythene
@ Contents
• 1 Description
• 2 Classification
• 3 Ethylene copolymers
• 4 History
• 5 Physical properties
• 6 Environmental issues
• 7 References
• 8 External links
@ Description
@ Classification
Recently much research activity has focused on the nature and distribution
of long chain branches in polyethylene. In HDPE a relatively small number
of these branches, perhaps 1 in 100 or 1,000 branches per backbone carbon,
can significantly affect the rheological properties of the polymer.
@ Ethylene copolymers
@ History
By the end of the 1950s both the Phillips- and Ziegler-type catalysts were
being used for HDPE production. Phillips initially had difficulties producing
a HDPE product of uniform quality and filled warehouses with off-
specification plastic. However, financial ruin was unexpectedly averted in
1957 when the hula hoop, a toy consisting of a circular polyethylene tube,
became a fad among youth in the United States.
Until recently the metallocenes were the most active single-site catalysts for
ethylene polymerisation known—new catalysts are typically compared to
zirconocene dichloride. Much effort is currently being exerted on developing
new, single-site (so-called post-metallocene) catalysts that may allow greater
tuning of the polymer structure than is possible with metallocenes. Recently
work by Fujita at the Mitsui corporation (amongst others) has demonstrated
that certain salicylaldimine complexes of Group 4 metals show substantially
higher activity than the metallocenes.
@ Physical properties
Most LDPE, MDPE and HDPE grades have excellent chemical resistance
and do not dissolve at room temperature because of their crystallinity.
Polyethylene (other than cross-linked polyethylene) usually can be dissolved
at elevated temperatures in aromatic hydrocarbons such as toluene or xylene,
or in chlorinated solvents such as trichloroethane or trichlorobenzene.
@ Environmental issues