Dictionary Definition
Terylene n : a kind of polyester fabric [syn:
Dacron]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
Polyethylene terephthalate (sometimes written
poly(ethylene terephthalate), commonly abbreviated PET, PETE, or
the obsolete PETP or PET-P), is a thermoplastic polymer resin of the polyester family and is used
in synthetic
fibers; beverage, food and other liquid containers;
thermoforming applications; and engineering resins often in
combination with glass fiber. It is one of the most important raw
materials used in man-made fibers.
Depending on its processing and thermal history,
it may exist both as an amorphous
(transparent) and as a semi-crystalline (opaque and white)
material. Its monomer can be synthesized by the esterification reaction
between terephthalic
acid and ethylene
glycol with water as a byproduct, or the transesterification
reaction between ethylene
glycol and dimethyl
terephthalate with methanol as a byproduct.
Polymerization is through a polycondensation reaction of the
monomers (done immediately after
esterification/transesterification) with ethylene glycol as the
byproduct (the ethylene glycol is recycled in production).
The majority of the world's PET production is for
synthetic fibers (in excess of 60%) with bottle production
accounting for around 30% of global demand. In discussing textile
applications, PET is generally referred to as simply "polyester" while "PET" is used
most often to refer to packaging applications.
Some of the trade names of PET products are
Dacron, Diolen, Terylene, and Trevira fibers, Cleartuf, Eastman PET and
Polyclear bottle resins, Hostaphan, Melinex, and Mylar
films, and Arnite, Ertalyte, Impet, Rynite and Valox injection
molding resins. The polyester Industry makes up
about 18% of world polymer production and is third after polyethylene (PE) and
polypropylene
(PP).
Uses
PET can be semi-rigid to rigid, depending on its
thickness, and is very lightweight. It makes a good gas and fair
moisture barrier, as well as a good barrier to alcohol (requires additional
"Barrier" treatment) and solvents. It is strong and
impact-resistant. It
is naturally colorless with high transparency.
When produced as a thin film (often known by the
tradename Mylar), PET is often
coated with aluminium to reduce its
permeability, and to make it reflective and opaque. PET
bottles are excellent barrier materials and are widely used for
soft
drinks, (see carbonation). PET or Dacron
is also used as a thermal
insulation layer on the outside of the
International Space Station as seen in an episode of Modern
Marvels "Sub Zero". For certain specialty bottles, PET sandwiches an
additional polyvinyl
alcohol to further reduce its oxygen permeability.
When filled with glass particles
or fibers,
it becomes significantly stiffer
and more durable. This glass-filled plastic, in a semi-crystalline
formulation, is sold under the tradename Rynite, Arnite, Hostadur,
and Crastin.
While most thermoplastics can, in principle, be
recycled, PET bottle recycling is more practical
than many other plastic applications. The primary reason is that
plastic carbonated soft drink bottles and water
bottles are almost exclusively PET which makes them more easily
identifiable in a recycle stream. PET has a resin
identification code of 1. PET, as with many plastics, is also
an excellent candidate for thermal recycling (incineration) as it
is composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen with only trace amounts
of catalyst elements (no sulphur) and has the energy content of
soft coal.
One of the uses for a recycled PET bottle is for
the manufacture of polar fleece
material. It can also make fiber for polyester products.
PET was patented in 1941 by the Calico
Printers' Association of Manchester. The
PET bottle was patented in 1973.
Intrinsic viscosity
One of the most important characteristics of PET is referred to as I.V. (intrinsic viscosity).The I.V. of the material, measured in deciliters per gram (dl/g) is
dependent upon the length of its polymer chains. The longer the
chains, the stiffer the material, and therefore the higher the I.V.
The average chain length of a particular batch of resin can be
controlled during polymerization.
An I.V. of about:
Drying
PET is hygroscopic, meaning that it naturally absorbs water from its surroundings. However, when this 'damp' PET is then heated a chemical reaction known as hydrolysis takes place between the water and the PET which reduces its molecular weight (IV) and its physical properties. This means that before the resin can be processed in a molding machine, as much moisture as possible must be removed from the resin. This is achieved through the use of a desiccant or dryers before the PET is fed into the processing equipment.Inside the dryer, hot dry air is pumped into the
bottom of the hopper containing the resin so that it flows up
through the pellets, removing moisture on its way. The hot wet air
leaves the top of the hopper and is first run through an
after-cooler, because it is easier to remove moisture from cold air
than hot air. The resulting cool wet air is then passed through a
desiccant bed. Finally
the cool dry air leaving the desiccant bed is re-heated in a
process heater and sent back through the same processes in a closed
loop. Typically residual moisture levels in the resin must be less
than 40 parts per million (parts of water per million parts of
resin, by weight) before processing. Dryer residence time should
not be shorter than about four hours. This is because drying the
material in less than 4 hours would require a temperature above 160
°C, at which level hydrolysis would begin inside
the pellets before they could be dried out.
Copolymers
In addition to pure (homopolymer) PET, PET modified by copolymerization is also available.In some cases, the modified properties of
copolymer are more desirable for a particular application. For
example, cyclohexane
dimethanol (CHDM) can be added to the polymer backbone in place
of ethylene
glycol. Since this building block is much larger (6 additional
carbon atoms) than the ethylene glycol unit it replaces, it does
not fit in with the neighbouring chains the way an ethylene glycol
unit would. This interferes with crystallization and lowers the
polymer's melting
temperature. Such PET is generally known as PETG
(EastmanChemical and SKchemicals are the only two
manufacturers).
Another common modifier is isophthalic acid,
replacing some of the 1,4-(para-) linked terephthalate
units. The 1,2-(ortho-) or 1,3-(meta-) linkage produces an angle in
the chain, which also disturbs crystallinity.
Such copolymers are advantageous for certain
moulding applications, such as thermoforming, which is
used for example to make tray or blister packagings from PETG film,
or PETG
sheet. On the other hand, crystallization is important in other
applications where mechanical and dimensional stability are
important, such as seat belts. For
PET bottles, the use of small amounts of CHDM or other comonomers
can be useful: if only small amounts of comonomers are used,
crystallization is slowed but not prevented entirely. As a result,
bottles are obtainable via stretch blow molding
("SBM"), which are both clear and crystalline enough to be an
adequate barrier to aromas and even gases, such as carbon dioxide
in carbonated beverages.
Crystals
Crystallization occurs when polymer chains fold up on themselves in a repeating, symmetrical pattern. Long polymer chains tend to become entangled on themselves, which prevents full crystallization in all but the most carefully controlled circumstances. PET is no exception to this rule; 60% crystallization is the upper limit for commercial products, with the exception of polyester fibers.PET in its natural state is a crystalline resin.
Clear products can be produced by rapidly cooling molten polymer to
form an amorphous
solid. Like glass,
amorphous PET forms when its molecules are not given enough time to
arrange themselves in an orderly fashion as the melt is cooled. At
room temperature the molecules are frozen in place, but if enough
heat energy is put back into them, they begin to move again,
allowing crystals to nucleate and grow. This
procedure is known as solid-state
crystallization.
Like most materials, PET tends to produce many
small crystallites
when crystallized from an amorphous solid, rather than forming one
large single crystal. Light tends to scatter as it crosses the
boundaries between crystallites and the amorphous regions between
them. This scattering means that crystalline PET is opaque and
white in most cases. Fiber
drawing is among the few industrial processes that produces a
nearly single-crystal product.
Degradation
PET is subject to various types of degradations during processing. The main degradations that can occur are hydrolytic, thermal and probably most important thermal oxidation. When PET degrades, several things happen: discoloration, chain scissions resulting in reduced molecular weight, formation of acetaldehyde and cross-links ("gel" or "fish-eye" formation). Discoloration is due to the formation of various chromophoric systems following prolonged thermal treatment at elevated temperatures. This becomes a problem when the optical requirements of the polymer are very high like for example in packaging applications. Acetaldehyde is normally a colorless gas with a fruity smell. It forms naturally in fruit, but it can cause an off-taste in bottled water. Acetaldehyde forms in PET through the "abuse" of the material. High temperatures (PET decomposes above 300 °C or 570 °F), high pressures, extruder speeds (excessive shear flow raises temperature) and long barrel residence times all contribute to the production of acetaldehyde. When acetaldehyde is produced, some of it remains dissolved in the walls of a container and then diffuses into the product stored inside, altering the taste and aroma. This is not such a problem for non-consumables such as shampoo, for fruit juices, which already contain acetaldehyde or for strong-tasting drinks, such as soft drinks. For bottled water, low acetaldehyde content is quite important, because if nothing masks the aroma, even extremely low concentrations (10-20 parts per billion parts of resin, by weight) of acetaldehyde can produce an off-taste. The thermal and thermooxidative degradation results in poor processability characteristics and performance of the material.One way to alleviate this is to use a copolymer. Comonomers such as
CHDM or isophthalic
acid lower the melting
temperature and reduces the degree of crystallinity of PET
(especially important when the material is used for bottle
manufacturing). Thus the resin can be plastically formed at lower
temperatures and/or with lower force. This helps to prevent
degradation, reducing the acetaldehyde content of the finished
product to an acceptable (that is, unnoticeable) level. See
copolymers,
above. Other ways to improve the stability of the polymer is by
using stabilizers, mainly antioxidants such as phosphites.
Recently, molecular level stabilization of the material using
nanostructured chemicals has also been considered.
Antimony
Antimony trioxide (Sb2O3) is a catalyst that is often used in the production of PET. It remains in the material and can thus in principle migrate out into food and drinks. Although antimony trioxide is of low toxicity, its presence is still of concern. The Swiss Federal Office of Public Health investigated the amount of antimony migration, comparing waters bottled in PET and glass: the antimony concentrations of the water in PET bottles was higher, but still well below the allowed maximal concentrations.http://www.bag.admin.ch/dokumentation/publikationen/01435/01796/index.html?lang=de&download=M3wBPgDB/8ull6Du36WcnojN14in3qSbnpWWZWiXmE6p1rJgsYfhyt3NhqbdqIV+baqwbKbXrZ6lhuDZz8mMps2go6fo (report available in German and French only) The Swiss Federal Office of Public Health concluded that small amounts of antimony migrate from the PET into bottled water, but that the health risk of the resulting low concentrations is negligible (1% of the "tolerable daily intake" determined by the WHO). A later (2006) but more widely publicized study by a group of geochemists at the University of Heidelberg headed by William Shotyk found similar amounts of antimony in water in PET bottles.http://www.rsc.org/delivery/_ArticleLinking/DisplayArticleForFree.cfm?doi=b517844b&JournalCode=EMThe most recent WHO risk assessment for antimony
in drinking water can be found here:
http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/dwq/chemicals/antimonysum.pdf
Re-crystallization
PET can be used to explore the crystallization of amorphous solids. The resin identification code can be used to verify the type of plastic it is made of: many plastic beverage bottles have the letters PET or PETE and a code of 1 on the bottom, near the center. When a flame is held several inches below the bottle and slowly brought closer, part of the material will visibly change. This happens because high temperatures melt the PET. This releases the tension that was frozen in during the blow molding process and the polymer chains will shift to a more relaxed and disordered state, which results in shrinkage of the softened area. Because of the decreased order of the polymer chains, there are now fewer crystal nuclei. Consequently, when the crystallites re-form upon cooling they grow larger than the original crystallites in the bottle wall. Because the new crystallites are larger than the wave length of light, they will now cause light to scatter, giving the material an opaque white appearance.Processing equipment
There are two basic molding methods, one-step and two-step. In two-step molding, two separate machines are used. The first machine injection molds the preform. The preform looks like a test tube. The bottle-cap threads are already molded into place, and the body of the tube is significantly thicker, as it will be inflated into its final shape in the second step using stretch-blow molding.In the second process, the preforms are heated
rapidly and then inflated against a two-part mold to form them into
the final shape of the bottle. Preforms (uninflated bottles) are
now also used as containers for candy.
In one-step
machines, the entire process from raw material to finished
container is conducted within one machine, making it especially
suitable for molding non-standard shapes (custom molding),
including jars, flat oval,
flask shapes etc. Its greatest merit is the reduction in space,
product handling and energy, and far higher visual quality than can
be achieved by the two-step system.
See also
- Recycling of PET Bottles
- Biaxially oriented PET film
- Plastic recycling
- Polyester
- Solar water disinfection - a method of disinfecting water using only sunlight and plastic PET bottles
References
External links
terylene in Czech: Polyethylentereftalát
terylene in German:
Polyethylenterephthalat
terylene in Spanish: Politereftalato de
etileno
terylene in Esperanto: Polietilena
tereftalato
terylene in French: Polyéthylène
téréphtalate
terylene in Indonesian: Polietilena
tereftalat
terylene in Icelandic:
Pólýetýlenterefþalat
terylene in Italian: Polietilene
tereftalato
terylene in Lithuanian: Polietileno
tereftalatas
terylene in Dutch: Polyetheentereftalaat
terylene in Japanese: ポリエチレンテレフタラート
terylene in Norwegian:
Polyetylentereftalat
terylene in Polish: Poli(tereftalan
etylenu)
terylene in Portuguese: PET (plástico)
terylene in Russian: Полиэтилентерефталат
terylene in Simple English: Polyethylene
terephtalate
terylene in Slovak: Polyetyléntereftalát
terylene in Slovenian: Dacron
terylene in Finnish:
Polyetyleenitereftalaatti
terylene in Swedish: Polyetentereftalat
terylene in Turkish: Polietilen tereftalat
terylene in Chinese: 聚对苯二甲酸乙二酯