US3695477A - Plastisols and gaskets - Google Patents

Plastisols and gaskets Download PDF

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US3695477A
US3695477A US38491A US3695477DA US3695477A US 3695477 A US3695477 A US 3695477A US 38491 A US38491 A US 38491A US 3695477D A US3695477D A US 3695477DA US 3695477 A US3695477 A US 3695477A
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plastisols
plastisol
parts
weight
block copolymer
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Robert P Edmonston
John W Lefforge
George C Keller
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WR Grace and Co
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K3/00Materials not provided for elsewhere
    • C09K3/10Materials in mouldable or extrudable form for sealing or packing joints or covers
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L27/00Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of compounds having one or more unsaturated aliphatic radicals, each having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond, and at least one being terminated by a halogen; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
    • C08L27/02Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of compounds having one or more unsaturated aliphatic radicals, each having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond, and at least one being terminated by a halogen; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers not modified by chemical after-treatment
    • C08L27/04Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of compounds having one or more unsaturated aliphatic radicals, each having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond, and at least one being terminated by a halogen; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers not modified by chemical after-treatment containing chlorine atoms
    • C08L27/06Homopolymers or copolymers of vinyl chloride
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L57/00Compositions of unspecified polymers obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L53/00Compositions of block copolymers containing at least one sequence of a polymer obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
    • C08L53/02Compositions of block copolymers containing at least one sequence of a polymer obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers of vinyl-aromatic monomers and conjugated dienes
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K2200/00Chemical nature of materials in mouldable or extrudable form for sealing or packing joints or covers
    • C09K2200/06Macromolecular organic compounds, e.g. prepolymers
    • C09K2200/0615Macromolecular organic compounds, e.g. prepolymers obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds
    • C09K2200/0635Halogen-containing polymers, e.g. PVC
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09KMATERIALS FOR MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS, NOT PROVIDED FOR ELSEWHERE
    • C09K2200/00Chemical nature of materials in mouldable or extrudable form for sealing or packing joints or covers
    • C09K2200/06Macromolecular organic compounds, e.g. prepolymers
    • C09K2200/0642Copolymers containing at least three different monomers

Definitions

  • ABSTRACT Plastisols preferably of polyvinyl chloride, having a high yield value and low high shear viscosities are obtained by thickening conventional plastisol preparations with about 1 to 40 parts of certain block copolymers of the A-B-A type in which B is an elastomeric polymer core and A stands for a thermoplastic polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound.
  • resilient gaskets can be manufactured from these improved materials.
  • an air-tight pressure crown seal is applied on the orifice of the container, for instance a bottle, to retain the carbonation of the contents and to protect the beverage against contamination.
  • Crowns for such bottles are made of metal having uniform ductility, gage and even temper and are lined with a sealing gasket which may consist of cork, polyethylene, fluxed plastisols or other plastic materials. It is with fluxed plastisol linings or gaskets of this general type that the present invention is concerned.
  • plastisols comprise a dispersion of finely divided thermoplastic resin particles in a liquid nonvolatile plasticizer in which the resin is insoluble or only very slightly soluble at room temperature. At elevated temperatures, the resin becomes substantially completely solvated by the plasticizer, yielding a homogeneous solution which transforms itself into a rubbery thermoplastic mass upon cooling.
  • other ingredients may enter the plastisol compositions to accomplish conventional purposes.
  • the compositions may contain fillers, pigments, stabilizers, wetting agents and thickeners.
  • a gas may be dispersed in the plastisol or a gas-evolving agent, Le, a blowing agent, may be incorporated which will decompose at the fluxing temperature of the composition.
  • Plastisols are widely used in the manufacture of sealing gaskets for crown closures, where the gasket comprises an over-all liner coextensive with the inside surface of the closure panel.
  • a measured quantity of plastisol is deposited in an inverted closure shell and the closure is rotated at high speed to cause the deposit to spread over the inner surface of the closure panel.
  • the deposit is then heated at a temperature and for a period of time sufficient to completely flux the composition.
  • the lined crown closure thus obtained is placed over the orifice of the bottle and the skirt of the crown is crimped around the locking ring of the bottle to form a seal.
  • the operations and manipulations that the plastisols must undergo in the procedures just described and in other similar sealing applications require that the liquid compositions involved possess certain characteristic rheological properties.
  • the compositions must be fluid enough at high shear rates to permit easy disposition through a nozzle and rapid distribution over the inner surface of the closure when the spin lining technique is employed. Yet, they must possess a viscosity suffi ciently high so that the gasket material remain in position until it is solidified by heat treatment.
  • This type of property is conventionally imparted to plastisols by incorporating into them a small quantity of a finely divided material, generally of siliceous nature.
  • the block copolymers that-are added to plastisols according to the present invention are thermoplastic elastomers composed of polymerized alkenyl substituted aromatic segments attached to the ends of an elastomeric polymerized hydrocarbon chain core.
  • Usable hydrocarbon monomers for forming the core preferably contain four to eight carbon atoms. This includes butadiene, isoprene, pentadiene-l,3 and 2,3- dimethylbutadiene.
  • the elastome'ric core material may also consist of saturated ethylene-propylene copolymers.
  • the alkenyl aromatic hydrocarbon monomers used to form the rest of the block copolymer molecule are preferably of the monovinyl substituted type such as styrene, methylstyrene, vinyl toluene, vinyl naphthalene and the like. More than one monomer may be employed for each section of the block copolymer.
  • the structure of the block copolymers being described may be represented by the formula A-B-A in which B is the elastomeric core while A stands for the aromatic alkene polymer segments. While, obviously such copolymers may possess a gradation of properties ranging from those of relatively homogeneous polymerized aromatic vinyl compoundsto those of relatively homogeneous elastomers, the polymers of particular interest here possess a thermoplastic seg ment content of about 10 to 50 percent by weight, an average elastomeric core molecular weight of about 10,000 to 200,000, and an average thermoplastic segment molecular weight of 2,000 to 30,000.
  • the preferred copolymers within the class just described are styrene-butadiene block copolymers containing from about 25 to 30 percent by weight polymerized styrene and having an average overall molecular weight of between about 60,000 and 160,000.
  • the selected copolymer is dissolved in a conventional liquid plasticizer and the solution is incorporated into the plastisol by mixing. Between about 1 and 40 parts by weight of block copolymer per hundred parts of plastisol resin will yield the desired results.
  • the plasticizers that may be employed to dissolve the block copolymer as well as to form the plastisol may be dialkyl phthalates, such as dioctyl phthalate, butyl decyl phthalate and octyl decyl phthalate; alkyl phthalyl alkyl glycollates, such as butyl phthalyl butyl glycollate and methyl phthalyl ethyl glycollate; and dialkyl esters of alkane dicarboxylic acids, such as dioctyl and dibutyl sebacates, dioctyl azelate and diisobutyl adipate.
  • dialkyl phthalates such as dioctyl phthalate, butyl decyl phthalate and octyl decyl phthalate
  • alkyl phthalyl alkyl glycollates such as butyl phthalyl butyl glycollate and methyl phthalyl
  • Secondary plasticizers that may be incorporated in the plastisol include trialkyl and triaryl phosphates, acetyl trialkyl citrates, alkyl esters of high fatty acids, epoxy derivatives and polymeric polyester plasticizers, such as glycol sebacate polyesters. If desired, mixtures of plasticizers may be employed including one or more primary plasticizers and blends of primary and secondary plasticizers.
  • a block copolymer preflux is formed by heating with agitation at 250 to 280F, one part by weight of a block copolymer of styrene and butadiene containing 25 percent bound styrene and having an average overall molecular weight of about 120,000, with 4 parts dioctylphthalate.
  • a conventional polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastisol is prepared from the following ingredients:
  • a wax-plasticizer blend is formed by melting the wax in a few parts of the plasticizer at a temperature of approximately 130F.
  • the hot wax blend is mixed with about half the plasticizer, the mixture stirred and allowed to cool to about 1 F.
  • the eicosane, the stabilizer, the azo compound and the resin are added with stirring.
  • the remaining plasticizer is also added and the resulting composition stirred until a homogeneous mixture results.
  • the preflux is then blended in to obtain a product having a 60 rpm viscosity of 14,000 centipoises and a 6 rpm viscosity of 45,000 cps as measured on a Brookfield viscosimeter (model LVF-SX) at 1 10F with a No. 3 spindle.
  • EXAMPLE 2 A plastisol is prepared as in Example 1 except that it contains 3 parts of fumed silica, a conventional thickener. The SBR block copolymer preflux is omitted.
  • the plastisol thus obtained has a 6 rpm viscosity of 60,000 cps and a 60 rpm viscosity of 20,000 cps.
  • Example 1 and 2 The plastisols of Example 1 and 2 were applied to bottle crowns and fluxed in the conventional manner. The crowns were then affixed to bottles filled with simulated soft drink pack and the packages obtained were subjected to an abuse test.
  • EXAMPLE 3 Another illustrative composition can be prepared in the conventional manner from the following ingredients:
  • a fluxed plastisol with greatly decreased compressive modulus and only moderately increased shear strength, thus particularly suited for sealing and capping without any decrease in blow-off pressure, is prepared by incorporating 25 parts per 100 parts resin by weight of a styrene-butadiene block copolymer such as Kraton*(*Registered trademark, Shell Chemical Co.) 1102 which has a Brookfield viscosity of about 1000 cp at room temperature for a 25 percent concentration by weight in toluene.
  • a 50 percent by weight solution of the block copolymer in the plasticizer is prepared by prolonged stirring and heating, for instance at 280F, and this solution is added to a plastisol which has otherwise been prepared in the conventional manner.
  • Parts by Weight Solutions or suspensions of the various ingredient in DOP are first prepared at the solids concentration indicated and the resulting mixtures are combined in the proportions indicated in the total column of the above table.
  • the block copolymer solution is added last to a thorough mixture of all the other components and it is mixed in until a uniform product is obtained.
  • the net amount of plasticizer used is tabulated in the next column and adds up to 425 parts by weight for a final ratio of 85 parts per 100 parts resin.
  • a similar preparation can be made without the 125 parts styrene-butadiene block copolymer.
  • a silica aerogel, 45 parts by weight is used instead; all other component quantities and ratios are maintained unchanged including the DOP to resin ratio.
  • the block copolymer-containing structures have been found to possess an average second blow-off pressure 17 psi higher than their silica-containing analogs over the range of 32 to 212F.
  • the closing force required for the block copolymer plastisol is only 50 to percent of that needed with the conventional silica preparations.
  • exposure of fluxed gaskets to 50 percent aqueous solution of ethyl alcohol at F results in a loss of only 8 percent of the plasticizer when the block copolymer is present while 18 percent of the plasticizer is extracted with silica present.
  • the use of block copolymers results in increased shear and tensile modulus while providing relatively lower durometer values.
  • the plastisol compositions that can benefit from the incorporation of block copolymers of the styrene-butadiene type as described in this invention are those of vinyl chloride homopolymers as well as copolymers containing up to 20 percent of vinyl acetate. Although such polymers are preferred, other acid-resistant thermoplastic resins may be used, including polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl butyrate, polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylidene chloride, and so on. These materials, as well as the other modifying components of the plastisols such as blowing agents, fillers, stabilizers, pigments and dispersing agents are well known to the art and are listed in numerous publications including, for example, U. S. Pat. No. 3,447,710. No need exists therefore for re-numerating all the possible elements that can be combined by the man skilled in the art to yield compositions that can be improved in the manner disclosed by the present invention.
  • a container closure comprising a flowed-in gasket consisting of a fluxed layer of a plastisol of a resin selected from the group consisting of homopolymers and copolymers of vinyl chloride containing up to 20 percent of vinyl acetate, containing, for each 100 parts by weight of the resin, from about 1 to 40 parts of a block copolymer having an A-B-A structure in which B represents an elastomeric core of polymerized diene units selected from the class consisting of conjugated diene hydrocarbon compounds having four to eight carbon atoms and elastomeric copolymers of ethylene with propylene, said core having an average molecular weight within the range of 10,000 to 200,000, and A represents a thermoplastic segment of a polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound of average molecular weight within the range of about 2,000 to 30,000, wherein the total polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound content constitutes from about 10 to 50 percent by weight of the block copolymermolecule.
  • the container closure of claim 1 wherein the plastisol contains about 5 to 25 parts by weight of a copolymer of styrene and butadiene having average over-all molecular weight of about 60,000 to 160,000 and a copolymerized styrene content within the range of 25 to 30 percent of the weight of the molecule.

Abstract

Plastisols, preferably of polyvinyl chloride, having a high yield value and low high shear viscosities are obtained by thickening conventional plastisol preparations with about 1 to 40 parts of certain block copolymers of the A-B-A type in which B is an elastomeric polymer core and A stands for a thermoplastic polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound. Tough, resilient gaskets can be manufactured from these improved materials.

Description

United States Patent Edmonston et al.
[ PLASTISOLS AND GASKETS [72] Inventors: Robert P. Edmonston, Billerica,
Mass. 01821; John W. Lell o rge, Lynnfield, Mass. 01940; George C. Keller, East Qerry, NH. 03041 Assignee: W. R. Grace & Co., Cambridge,
Mass.
Filed; May 18, 1970 Appl. No.: 38,491
US. Cl. ..215/40, 260/2.5 P, 260/23.7 H, 260/23.7 M, 260/28.5 B, 260/28.5 D,
260/30.6 R, 260/31.2 M, 260/3l.2 R,
260/318 M, 260/4l.5 R, 260/41.5 A,
, 260/873, 260/876 B Int. Cl. .....C08f 29/24, C08f 29/ 12, B65d 53/00 Field of Search ..260/876 B, 31.8 M; 215/40 References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 4/1969 Bauer et a1. ..260/876 B 3,459,831 8/1969 Luftglass et al. ..260/876 B Primary Examiner-Samuel H. Blech Attorney-Theodore C. Browne, Metro Kalimon, C. E. Parker, William L. Baker, Armand McMillan and Lawrence S. Cohen 5 7] ABSTRACT Plastisols, preferably of polyvinyl chloride, having a high yield value and low high shear viscosities are obtained by thickening conventional plastisol preparations with about 1 to 40 parts of certain block copolymers of the A-B-A type in which B is an elastomeric polymer core and A stands for a thermoplastic polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound.
Tough, resilient gaskets can be manufactured from these improved materials.
3 Claiins, No Drawings THE PRIOR ART In the bottling of carbonated beverages, an air-tight pressure crown seal is applied on the orifice of the container, for instance a bottle, to retain the carbonation of the contents and to protect the beverage against contamination. Crowns for such bottles are made of metal having uniform ductility, gage and even temper and are lined with a sealing gasket which may consist of cork, polyethylene, fluxed plastisols or other plastic materials. It is with fluxed plastisol linings or gaskets of this general type that the present invention is concerned.
Basically, plastisols comprise a dispersion of finely divided thermoplastic resin particles in a liquid nonvolatile plasticizer in which the resin is insoluble or only very slightly soluble at room temperature. At elevated temperatures, the resin becomes substantially completely solvated by the plasticizer, yielding a homogeneous solution which transforms itself into a rubbery thermoplastic mass upon cooling. In addition to the basic components, other ingredients may enter the plastisol compositions to accomplish conventional purposes. Thus the compositions may contain fillers, pigments, stabilizers, wetting agents and thickeners. Also, when a fluxed cellular liner is desired, a gas may be dispersed in the plastisol or a gas-evolving agent, Le, a blowing agent, may be incorporated which will decompose at the fluxing temperature of the composition.
Plastisols are widely used in the manufacture of sealing gaskets for crown closures, where the gasket comprises an over-all liner coextensive with the inside surface of the closure panel. According to one method of lining closures, a measured quantity of plastisol is deposited in an inverted closure shell and the closure is rotated at high speed to cause the deposit to spread over the inner surface of the closure panel. The deposit is then heated at a temperature and for a period of time sufficient to completely flux the composition. In bottle' capping operations, the lined crown closure thus obtained is placed over the orifice of the bottle and the skirt of the crown is crimped around the locking ring of the bottle to form a seal.
The operations and manipulations that the plastisols must undergo in the procedures just described and in other similar sealing applications require that the liquid compositions involved possess certain characteristic rheological properties. The compositions must be fluid enough at high shear rates to permit easy disposition through a nozzle and rapid distribution over the inner surface of the closure when the spin lining technique is employed. Yet, they must possess a viscosity suffi ciently high so that the gasket material remain in position until it is solidified by heat treatment. This type of property is conventionally imparted to plastisols by incorporating into them a small quantity of a finely divided material, generally of siliceous nature.
It is an object of this invention to provide improved plastisol preparations which yield tougher closure gaskets that can better survive the abuse to which such closures are conventionally subjected in their ultimate application. It is also an object of this invention to provide plastisols possessing a more easily controlled thixotropy than that of conventional materials. Another object is to prepare plastisols capable of yielding sealing gaskets of increased shear and tensile modulus under high strain and of lesser hardness than normally available. A further object is to provide fluxed plastisols that are more resistant to extraction of their plasticizer by certain organic liquids to which they may be exposed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION It has now been discovered that the yield value of unfluxed plastisols, i.'e., the low shear viscosity, can be successfully increased, without significantly affecting the high shear viscosity, byv incorporating into the plastisols relatively small quantities of certain thermopla'stic elastomeric block copolymers of conjugated dienes with certain alkenyl aromatic comonomers, dissolved in conventional plasticizers. It has also been discovered that sealing gaskets obtained from plastisols of this type will be stronger, more resilient and softer than those obtained from plastisols containing conventional siliceous materials.
While the quantity of block copolymer that will achieve desirable improvement will vary with such factors as the nature and molecular weight of specific block copolymers, the plasticizer contents of the composition and the particular application contemplated, the preferred proportions lie within the range of about 5 to 25 parts by weight of block copolymer per parts of plastisol resin. However, useful compositions may be devised with as little as 1 part and as much as 40 parts of copolymer per 100 parts thermoplastic resin.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION The block copolymers that-are added to plastisols according to the present invention are thermoplastic elastomers composed of polymerized alkenyl substituted aromatic segments attached to the ends of an elastomeric polymerized hydrocarbon chain core. Usable hydrocarbon monomers for forming the core preferably contain four to eight carbon atoms. This includes butadiene, isoprene, pentadiene-l,3 and 2,3- dimethylbutadiene. The elastome'ric core material may also consist of saturated ethylene-propylene copolymers. The alkenyl aromatic hydrocarbon monomers used to form the rest of the block copolymer molecule are preferably of the monovinyl substituted type such as styrene, methylstyrene, vinyl toluene, vinyl naphthalene and the like. More than one monomer may be employed for each section of the block copolymer.
The structure of the block copolymers being described may be represented by the formula A-B-A in which B is the elastomeric core while A stands for the aromatic alkene polymer segments. While, obviously such copolymers may possess a gradation of properties ranging from those of relatively homogeneous polymerized aromatic vinyl compoundsto those of relatively homogeneous elastomers, the polymers of particular interest here possess a thermoplastic seg ment content of about 10 to 50 percent by weight, an average elastomeric core molecular weight of about 10,000 to 200,000, and an average thermoplastic segment molecular weight of 2,000 to 30,000. The preferred copolymers within the class just described are styrene-butadiene block copolymers containing from about 25 to 30 percent by weight polymerized styrene and having an average overall molecular weight of between about 60,000 and 160,000.
To carry out the invention, as mentioned earlier, the selected copolymer is dissolved in a conventional liquid plasticizer and the solution is incorporated into the plastisol by mixing. Between about 1 and 40 parts by weight of block copolymer per hundred parts of plastisol resin will yield the desired results.
The plasticizers that may be employed to dissolve the block copolymer as well as to form the plastisol may be dialkyl phthalates, such as dioctyl phthalate, butyl decyl phthalate and octyl decyl phthalate; alkyl phthalyl alkyl glycollates, such as butyl phthalyl butyl glycollate and methyl phthalyl ethyl glycollate; and dialkyl esters of alkane dicarboxylic acids, such as dioctyl and dibutyl sebacates, dioctyl azelate and diisobutyl adipate. Secondary plasticizers that may be incorporated in the plastisol include trialkyl and triaryl phosphates, acetyl trialkyl citrates, alkyl esters of high fatty acids, epoxy derivatives and polymeric polyester plasticizers, such as glycol sebacate polyesters. If desired, mixtures of plasticizers may be employed including one or more primary plasticizers and blends of primary and secondary plasticizers.
The following examples are given to illustrate the practice of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1 A block copolymer preflux is formed by heating with agitation at 250 to 280F, one part by weight of a block copolymer of styrene and butadiene containing 25 percent bound styrene and having an average overall molecular weight of about 120,000, with 4 parts dioctylphthalate.
A conventional polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastisol is prepared from the following ingredients:
Parts by weight PVC resin, plastisol grade 100 Dioctylphthalate (DOP) 50 Azodicarbonamide, 33% in DOP 1.08 Zinc/calcium stearates in epoxidized soybean oil (stabilizer) 0.5 Eicosane 4 Paraffin wax, melting range l20-l3 lF 3 Block copolymer preflux,
20% concentration 25 A wax-plasticizer blend is formed by melting the wax in a few parts of the plasticizer at a temperature of approximately 130F. The hot wax blend is mixed with about half the plasticizer, the mixture stirred and allowed to cool to about 1 F. The eicosane, the stabilizer, the azo compound and the resin are added with stirring. The remaining plasticizer is also added and the resulting composition stirred until a homogeneous mixture results. The preflux is then blended in to obtain a product having a 60 rpm viscosity of 14,000 centipoises and a 6 rpm viscosity of 45,000 cps as measured on a Brookfield viscosimeter (model LVF-SX) at 1 10F with a No. 3 spindle.
EXAMPLE 2 A plastisol is prepared as in Example 1 except that it contains 3 parts of fumed silica, a conventional thickener. The SBR block copolymer preflux is omitted.
The plastisol thus obtained has a 6 rpm viscosity of 60,000 cps and a 60 rpm viscosity of 20,000 cps.
The plastisols of Example 1 and 2 were applied to bottle crowns and fluxed in the conventional manner. The crowns were then affixed to bottles filled with simulated soft drink pack and the packages obtained were subjected to an abuse test.
In this test, a static load pressure of lbs is applied to capped bottles and maintained constant for a period of one week. This treatment duplicates conditions found in soft drink bottling plants where cases of packed soda are stacked on top of one another with the weight of the upper cases being applied to the bottle crowns in the lower cases. After one week, the static pressure is released. The carbon dioxide pressure retained in each bottle is measured, 24 hours after release, by means of a head sampler and a pressure gage. The results are recorded in terms of gas volumes, 4.0 gas volumes indicating a perfect performance since that is the amount of gas originally charged into the bottles. A 3.8 gas volume retention is considered acceptable by the industry, while ratings below 3.8 failures. One failure in a sample of six bottles suffices to rule a compound unsatisfactory.
The essential properties of the plastisols of Examples 1 and 2 as well as the performance of crowns sealed with them under static load abuse are summarized in the following table:
lt becomes apparent from these results that SBR block copolymer reinforced plastisols show increased resistance to static load abuse as compared to the conventional silica thickened materials.
EXAMPLE 3 Another illustrative composition can be prepared in the conventional manner from the following ingredients:
Parts by weight PVC resin, plastisol grade Dioctyl phthalate Paraffin wax Diatomaceous earth Azodicarbonamide Zinc oxide Titanium dioxide Hematite Limonite Carbon black To this plastisol is added 20 parts of a 15 percent preflux of an isoprene-styrene block copolymer having an average core molecular weight of 200,000 and an average styrene segment molecular weight of 30,000. The resulting unfluxed plastisol has a 1 10F viscosity of about 10,000 cps at 6 rpm and about 3,400 cps at 60 rpm. When fluxed and subjected to the static load abuse test described earlier, it behaves substantially as the preparation of Example 1 in that the average gas volume retained in 6 sample bottles is at least 3.8 after a 4 volume charge.
EXAMPLE 4 A fluxed plastisol with greatly decreased compressive modulus and only moderately increased shear strength, thus particularly suited for sealing and capping without any decrease in blow-off pressure, is prepared by incorporating 25 parts per 100 parts resin by weight of a styrene-butadiene block copolymer such as Kraton*(*Registered trademark, Shell Chemical Co.) 1102 which has a Brookfield viscosity of about 1000 cp at room temperature for a 25 percent concentration by weight in toluene. A 50 percent by weight solution of the block copolymer in the plasticizer is prepared by prolonged stirring and heating, for instance at 280F, and this solution is added to a plastisol which has otherwise been prepared in the conventional manner.
A representative formulation would thus appear as follows:
Parts by Weight Solutions or suspensions of the various ingredient in DOP are first prepared at the solids concentration indicated and the resulting mixtures are combined in the proportions indicated in the total column of the above table. The block copolymer solution is added last to a thorough mixture of all the other components and it is mixed in until a uniform product is obtained. The net amount of plasticizer used is tabulated in the next column and adds up to 425 parts by weight for a final ratio of 85 parts per 100 parts resin.
For comparison purposes, a similar preparation can be made without the 125 parts styrene-butadiene block copolymer. A silica aerogel, 45 parts by weight is used instead; all other component quantities and ratios are maintained unchanged including the DOP to resin ratio.
Both formulation yield thixotropic mixtures with viscosities too high for measurement by ordinary means. On lining closures with 400 mg of these plastisols and fluxing for 3 minutes at 410F, a number of interesting differences can be observed.
For instance, the block copolymer-containing structures have been found to possess an average second blow-off pressure 17 psi higher than their silica-containing analogs over the range of 32 to 212F. Also, in the closing or capping operation, the closing force required for the block copolymer plastisol is only 50 to percent of that needed with the conventional silica preparations. Furthermore, exposure of fluxed gaskets to 50 percent aqueous solution of ethyl alcohol at F results in a loss of only 8 percent of the plasticizer when the block copolymer is present while 18 percent of the plasticizer is extracted with silica present. In general, the use of block copolymers results in increased shear and tensile modulus while providing relatively lower durometer values.
The plastisol compositions that can benefit from the incorporation of block copolymers of the styrene-butadiene type as described in this invention are those of vinyl chloride homopolymers as well as copolymers containing up to 20 percent of vinyl acetate. Although such polymers are preferred, other acid-resistant thermoplastic resins may be used, including polyvinyl acetate, polyvinyl butyrate, polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylidene chloride, and so on. These materials, as well as the other modifying components of the plastisols such as blowing agents, fillers, stabilizers, pigments and dispersing agents are well known to the art and are listed in numerous publications including, for example, U. S. Pat. No. 3,447,710. No need exists therefore for re-numerating all the possible elements that can be combined by the man skilled in the art to yield compositions that can be improved in the manner disclosed by the present invention.
What is claimed is:
l. A container closure comprising a flowed-in gasket consisting of a fluxed layer of a plastisol of a resin selected from the group consisting of homopolymers and copolymers of vinyl chloride containing up to 20 percent of vinyl acetate, containing, for each 100 parts by weight of the resin, from about 1 to 40 parts of a block copolymer having an A-B-A structure in which B represents an elastomeric core of polymerized diene units selected from the class consisting of conjugated diene hydrocarbon compounds having four to eight carbon atoms and elastomeric copolymers of ethylene with propylene, said core having an average molecular weight within the range of 10,000 to 200,000, and A represents a thermoplastic segment of a polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound of average molecular weight within the range of about 2,000 to 30,000, wherein the total polymerized alkenyl aromatic compound content constitutes from about 10 to 50 percent by weight of the block copolymermolecule.
2. The container closure of claim 1 wherein the plastisol contains about 5 to 25 parts by weight of a copolymer of styrene and butadiene having average over-all molecular weight of about 60,000 to 160,000 and a copolymerized styrene content within the range of 25 to 30 percent of the weight of the molecule.
3. The container closure of claim 1 wherein in the block copolymer the diene unit of the elastomeric segment is derived from isoprene.

Claims (2)

  1. 2. The container closure of claim 1 wherein the plastisol contains about 5 to 25 parts by weight of a copolymer of styrene and butadiene having average over-all molecular weight of about 60,000 to 160,000 and a copolymerized styrene content within the range of 25 to 30 percent of the weight of the molecule.
  2. 3. The container closure of claim 1 wherein in the block copolymer the diene unit of the elastomeric segment is derived from isoprene.
US38491A 1970-05-18 1970-05-18 Plastisols and gaskets Expired - Lifetime US3695477A (en)

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CA (1) CA953842A (en)
DE (1) DE2124375A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2091755A5 (en)

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3852096A (en) * 1972-02-25 1974-12-03 Exxon Research Engineering Co Process for fabricating an article from a multiphase copolymer composition
US3925280A (en) * 1972-02-25 1975-12-09 Exxon Research Engineering Co Fabrication multiphase plastics from liquid suspension
US4020966A (en) * 1975-03-28 1977-05-03 W. R. Grace & Co. Plastisol composition and container closure gasket made therefrom
US4042556A (en) * 1974-05-23 1977-08-16 Central Glass Co., Ltd. Process for the production of hard vinyl chloride foams
US4085186A (en) * 1975-12-05 1978-04-18 Cpl Corporation Process for producing flow-in closure sealing gaskets from hot melt compositions
US4096204A (en) * 1976-06-07 1978-06-20 Shell Oil Company Halogenated thermoplastic/block copolymer blend
US4143185A (en) * 1972-02-25 1979-03-06 Exxon Research & Engineering Co. Fabrication of coatings from thermoplastic ionomers
US4208315A (en) * 1979-02-01 1980-06-17 Shell Oil Company Footwear composition of a blend of ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer, poly(vinyl chloride) and a block copolymer
US4226943A (en) * 1978-11-21 1980-10-07 Otsuka Kagaku Yakuhin Kabushiki Kaisha Foamable composition of vinyl chloride polymers and method of producing open cell sheet
US4228245A (en) * 1979-07-02 1980-10-14 Monsanto Company Foam rubber polyblend
US4278718A (en) * 1980-01-11 1981-07-14 W. R. Grace & Co. Sealing compositions for minimizing soluble iron migration
US4485192A (en) * 1982-10-12 1984-11-27 W. R. Grace & Co. Plastisol sealing gaskets puffed with hollow discrete spheres
US4968514A (en) * 1984-12-11 1990-11-06 Forbes Polytech, Inc. Beer bottle with fully reacted thermoplastic polyurethane crown capliner
US5137164A (en) * 1987-03-05 1992-08-11 Owens-Illinois Closure Inc. Closure assembly using epoxidized natural oil in a low fusing plastisol
US5187203A (en) * 1991-10-23 1993-02-16 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Non-corrosive elastomeric foam for insulating copper tubes
WO1996039338A1 (en) * 1995-06-06 1996-12-12 Multisorb Technologies, Inc. An oxygen absorbing container cap liner
US5776993A (en) * 1996-03-12 1998-07-07 Korea Institute Of Footwear & Leather Technology Thermoplastic PVC foam composition
US5839593A (en) * 1995-06-06 1998-11-24 Multiform Desiccants, Inc. Oxygen absorbing container cap liner
US5900455A (en) * 1992-06-05 1999-05-04 Shell Oil Company Elastosols, process for the preparation thereof, process for the use of such elastosols and products derived from them

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS58206752A (en) * 1982-05-28 1983-12-02 テルモ株式会社 Connector structure of medical instrument

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US3005796A (en) * 1958-05-05 1961-10-24 Dow Chemical Co Blend of polyvinyl chloride and butadiene-styrene copolymers and method of making same
US3429951A (en) * 1965-09-07 1969-02-25 Phillips Petroleum Co Reaction of peroxides with blends of polystyrene and rubbery block copolymer
US3441530A (en) * 1965-01-27 1969-04-29 Shell Oil Co Block copolymer powders
US3459831A (en) * 1965-09-24 1969-08-05 Shell Oil Co Block copolymer-polyethylene films

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3005796A (en) * 1958-05-05 1961-10-24 Dow Chemical Co Blend of polyvinyl chloride and butadiene-styrene copolymers and method of making same
US3441530A (en) * 1965-01-27 1969-04-29 Shell Oil Co Block copolymer powders
US3429951A (en) * 1965-09-07 1969-02-25 Phillips Petroleum Co Reaction of peroxides with blends of polystyrene and rubbery block copolymer
US3459831A (en) * 1965-09-24 1969-08-05 Shell Oil Co Block copolymer-polyethylene films

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3852096A (en) * 1972-02-25 1974-12-03 Exxon Research Engineering Co Process for fabricating an article from a multiphase copolymer composition
US3925280A (en) * 1972-02-25 1975-12-09 Exxon Research Engineering Co Fabrication multiphase plastics from liquid suspension
US4143185A (en) * 1972-02-25 1979-03-06 Exxon Research & Engineering Co. Fabrication of coatings from thermoplastic ionomers
US4042556A (en) * 1974-05-23 1977-08-16 Central Glass Co., Ltd. Process for the production of hard vinyl chloride foams
US4020966A (en) * 1975-03-28 1977-05-03 W. R. Grace & Co. Plastisol composition and container closure gasket made therefrom
US4085186A (en) * 1975-12-05 1978-04-18 Cpl Corporation Process for producing flow-in closure sealing gaskets from hot melt compositions
US4096204A (en) * 1976-06-07 1978-06-20 Shell Oil Company Halogenated thermoplastic/block copolymer blend
US4226943A (en) * 1978-11-21 1980-10-07 Otsuka Kagaku Yakuhin Kabushiki Kaisha Foamable composition of vinyl chloride polymers and method of producing open cell sheet
US4208315A (en) * 1979-02-01 1980-06-17 Shell Oil Company Footwear composition of a blend of ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer, poly(vinyl chloride) and a block copolymer
US4228245A (en) * 1979-07-02 1980-10-14 Monsanto Company Foam rubber polyblend
US4278718A (en) * 1980-01-11 1981-07-14 W. R. Grace & Co. Sealing compositions for minimizing soluble iron migration
US4485192A (en) * 1982-10-12 1984-11-27 W. R. Grace & Co. Plastisol sealing gaskets puffed with hollow discrete spheres
US4968514A (en) * 1984-12-11 1990-11-06 Forbes Polytech, Inc. Beer bottle with fully reacted thermoplastic polyurethane crown capliner
US5137164A (en) * 1987-03-05 1992-08-11 Owens-Illinois Closure Inc. Closure assembly using epoxidized natural oil in a low fusing plastisol
US5187203A (en) * 1991-10-23 1993-02-16 Armstrong World Industries, Inc. Non-corrosive elastomeric foam for insulating copper tubes
US5900455A (en) * 1992-06-05 1999-05-04 Shell Oil Company Elastosols, process for the preparation thereof, process for the use of such elastosols and products derived from them
WO1996039338A1 (en) * 1995-06-06 1996-12-12 Multisorb Technologies, Inc. An oxygen absorbing container cap liner
US5839593A (en) * 1995-06-06 1998-11-24 Multiform Desiccants, Inc. Oxygen absorbing container cap liner
AU718600B2 (en) * 1995-06-06 2000-04-20 Multisorb Technologies, Inc. An oxygen absorbing container cap liner
US5776993A (en) * 1996-03-12 1998-07-07 Korea Institute Of Footwear & Leather Technology Thermoplastic PVC foam composition

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
BR7103002D0 (en) 1973-04-05
AU2897471A (en) 1972-11-23
BE767331A (en) 1971-11-18
CA953842A (en) 1974-08-27
FR2091755A5 (en) 1972-01-14
DE2124375A1 (en) 1971-12-02

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