WO1995014047A1 - Purification process - Google Patents

Purification process Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1995014047A1
WO1995014047A1 PCT/US1994/013055 US9413055W WO9514047A1 WO 1995014047 A1 WO1995014047 A1 WO 1995014047A1 US 9413055 W US9413055 W US 9413055W WO 9514047 A1 WO9514047 A1 WO 9514047A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
fabric
polymer
coagulate
bed
contaminants
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1994/013055
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Ronald Gene Egres, Jr.
Clay Woodward Jones
John Frederick Kline, Jr.
Original Assignee
E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company filed Critical E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
Priority to JP51452895A priority Critical patent/JP3621103B2/en
Priority to DE69407818T priority patent/DE69407818T2/en
Priority to EP95901874A priority patent/EP0729479B1/en
Publication of WO1995014047A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995014047A1/en

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08FMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING CARBON-TO-CARBON UNSATURATED BONDS
    • C08F6/00Post-polymerisation treatments
    • C08F6/001Removal of residual monomers by physical means
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08FMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING CARBON-TO-CARBON UNSATURATED BONDS
    • C08F6/00Post-polymerisation treatments
    • C08F6/02Neutralisation of the polymerisation mass, e.g. killing the catalyst also removal of catalyst residues

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the purification, including drying, of polytetrafluoroethylene of the type prepared by aqueous dispersion polymerization of tetrafluoroethylene.
  • Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prepared by aqueous dispersion polymerization in the presence of initiator and surfactant and possibly wax adjuvant is coagulated to form a coagulate of small particles having a diameter on the order of 10-1000 microns.
  • This coagulate after separation from the bulk of the water, is still contaminated with water, polymerization initiator, surfactant and such other ingredients such as wax, if present. These contaminants have to be removed to the extent that the resultant PTFE fine powder is useful for fabrication into defect-free articles.
  • the PTFE coagulate has been purified by applying it as a shallow bed on the surface of a special paper made of plant fibers and exposing this shallow bed to a flow of heated air, e.g. at least 160°C, through the thickness of the bed, from top to bottom, whereby the contaminants described above volatilize and exit the bed as vapors though openings in the paper at the bottom of the bed, followed by removal of the resultant PTFE fine powder from the surface of the paper.
  • the particles readily separate from the paper surface, leaving behind the paper, itself now contaminated by absorption of at least some of the contaminants, notably surfactant and initiator.
  • Such paper cannot be re-used because of inability to withstand multiple cycles of exposure to the hot air and the problem of the contaminated paper re-contaminating a second batch (bed) of PTFE placed on the paper for purification.
  • the present process has the problems of cost in continuously replacing the paper support for new batches of PTFE to be freed of contamination and the expense of special precautions being necessary for disposal of the contaminated paper.
  • the present invention solves this problem by applying the polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) coagulate which contains volatile contaminants comprising water, polymerization initiator, surfactant and optionally, wax, as a shallow bed on the surface of a fabric, exposing the shallow bed to flow of heated air through the thickness of the bed from top to bottom to volatilize said contaminants, said fabric comprising polymer at least at its surface and being thermally and dimensionally stable at the temperature of the heated air, said fabric having openings therein t ⁇ pcmm uic passage of said air and volatilized contaminants, thereby removing said contaminants from said bed to thereby form PTFE fine powder from said coagulate, the openings in the fabric not permitting the passage of said fine powder therethrough, and removing the fine powder from said surface.
  • PTFE polytetrafluoroethylene
  • the fabric forming the surface for this purification process does not absorb the contaminants and because of its heat resistance, is reusable for purification of subsequent charges of PTFE coagulate, thereby saving disposal cost.
  • the process of polymerizing PTFE in an aqueous dispersion in the presence of initiator and surfactant and such other ingredients as wax which serves as an adjuvant to the polymerization process and recovery of PTFE coagulate from the resultant emulsion of PTFE particles and coagulating this dispersion is conventional.
  • the PTFE coagulate will normally contain at least about 30% water, at least about 0.0001% polymerization initiator such as ammonium persulfate, and at least about 0.0005% surfactant such as ammonium perfluorooctanoate, all %s being based on the weight of the coagulate. Additional contaminant may be present such as wax in an amount such as at least about 0.005wt%.
  • the PTFE of the coagulate and fine powder obtained therefrom can be polytetrafluoroethylene homopolymer or copolymer of tetrafluoroethylene with small amounts of one or more copolymerizable comonomers as are well known in the art, such as hexafluoropropylene, perfluoro(alkyl vinyl ether) wherein the alkyl group contains from 1 to 5 carbon atoms, preferably 3 carbon atoms, and perfluorobutyl ethylene, to nevertheless provide hon-melt fabricable polymer.
  • copolymerizable comonomers as are well known in the art, such as hexafluoropropylene, perfluoro(alkyl vinyl ether) wherein the alkyl group contains from 1 to 5 carbon atoms, preferably 3 carbon atoms, and perfluorobutyl ethylene, to nevertheless provide hon-melt fabricable polymer.
  • the paper formerly used to support the PTFE coagulate during purification is replaced by the fabric described above.
  • the fabric can be in such form as the liner of a perforated pan used for tray drying in an oven or as a continuous belt operating within an oven, in which case the process steps are carried out continuously, e ⁇ , continuously applying the coagulate at one end of the path of the belt, continuously removing the purified PTFE fine powder from the opposite end of the path of the belt, and continuously exposing the shallow bed of coagulate to the heated air as it passes along the path from the one end to the opposite end.
  • the fabric is the immediate support for the coagulate and can be re-used for purifying additional polymer.
  • the fabric can be on any construction, e.g. knit, spunbonded, or woven, which provides the dimensional integrity needed, depending on the form of the fabric used.
  • the fabric will be made of yarn in the case of knit or woven constructions and generally fibers in the spunbonded construction.
  • the yarn or fibers making up me fabric as the case may be provide openings between the yarn or fibers making up the fabric for passage of the heated air during the purification process, while supporting the PTFE coagulate/fine powder particles thereon, e ⁇ the openings do not permit the PTFE fine powder to pass therethrough.
  • the openings in the fabric should be small in order to hold the PTFE fine powder, such openings should also be large enough to permit the passage of the heated air and contaminants volatized thereby at a sufficient rate to result in a reasonable time for exposure to the hot air to effect the purification. Unduly extended exposure may cause decomposition of and or interaction between contaminants either within the bed of coagulate/fine powder or on the surface of the fabric, which manifests itself as "spotting" or discoloration of the PTFE fine powder present on the fabric either at that time or at a later time.
  • the fabric permit an air flow of at least about 75 CFM (0.021 mVmin), preferably at least 100CFM (0.28m 3 /min).
  • the air flows through the fabric disclosed herein are determined by the permeability procedure of ASTM-D737 at a pressure differential of 0.5in (1.27 cm) of water across the thickness of the fabric.
  • PTFE is known for its non-stick property, in the form of coagulate and the fine powder obtained therefrom, the polymer is notoriously sticky possibly because of the fibrillar nature of this form of PTFE.
  • the support surface for the coagulate is metal such as stainless steel
  • exposure of the coagulate to heated air to remove contaminants causes the resultant PTFE fine powder to adhere tenaciously to the metal surface even when it is in the form of a perforated plate which presents a smooth surface to the bed of PTFE coagulate.
  • This experience would suggest that a fabric which by its nature tends to present a non-smooth surface to the PTFE coagulate would obtain the same result.
  • the PTFE fine powder resulting from the purification process essentially does not stick to the polymer surface of the fabric.
  • the PTFE fine powder is readily removable therefrom by gravity, Le Omni turning the tray upside down causes the PTFE particles to fall away from the fabric.
  • passage of the fabric (belt) around a small diameter roll, e.g. 5cm in diameter causes the particles of PTFE to fall away from the belt.
  • removal can be assisted by a vacuum of the bed side of the belt and air knife on the underside of the belt aimed at the vacuum collection area.
  • the yarn of the fabric is preferably made of filaments rather than fibers so as to contribute to the cleanliness of the fabric by it not serving as a source of contamination of the PTFE fine powder, e.g. there are no fibers to separate from the yarn to become part of the PTFE fine powder and product fabricated therefrom.
  • Fabric made of fiber yarn can be given filamentary character by application of a continuous coating of thermally stable polymer.
  • Spunbonded fabric made from polymer fibers can be hot calendared to cause compression of the thickness of the fabric and the entangled fibers to become further anchored within the fabric by bonding together, to provide a non-contaminating fabric useful in the present invention.
  • TFE tetrafluoroethylene
  • PEEK polyetherether ketone
  • PPS polyphenylene sulfide
  • aramid such as poly(m-phenyleneisophthalamide), and poly(p-phenyleneterephthalamide).
  • TFE polymers are PTFE as described above with respect to the polymerization process and resultant coagulate and high melting but melt-fabricable tetrafluoroethylene polymers which can be copolymers of TFE with one or more of the monomers mentioned above in sufficient amount to provide the melt-fabricable character.
  • For low temperature purification operation e.g.
  • TFE polymer such as TFE/ethylene polymer; an additional low melting polymer that could be used is ethylene/chlorotrifluoroethylene polymer.
  • the filaments from which the fabric can be made can be made of non-polymeric material such as glass fiber yarn, which is thermally and dimensionally stable, with the fabric or yarn being coated with a continuous coating of thermally stable polymer to give not only filamentary character to the glass fiber yarn making up the fabric, but polymer character as well. In this embodiment, the demands of thermal and dimensional stability for the polymer can be somewhat less than if the polymer made up the entire fabric.
  • polymer filaments being composites of fibers, polymeric and non-polymeric, with a polymer coating, as well as polymer filaments which are made entirely of polymeric filamentary material.
  • the presence of the continuous coating of polymer making up the composite filament means that the coating on the filament is continuous, but not that the openings in the fabric are closed by the polymer coating.
  • the thermal stability of the polymer or any other material used to make the fabric should exist at the temperatures of exposure of the fabric to the heated air, such temperatures being usually within the range of 110 to 200°C, preferably 160 to 200°C.
  • tjy thermal and dimensional stability is meant that the fabric does not sonc ⁇ ⁇ r men ⁇ r decompose, but does retain its size and shape.
  • the fabric is made entirely of polymer, whether polymer fiber, polymer coated fiber yarn or polymer yarn of one or more filament, then the polymer must exhibit this dimensional stability.
  • Temperatures at which the fabric and/or the polymer in the fabric are thermally and dimensionally stable can be considered the use temperature thereof.
  • the melting point of the polymer and its use temperature should be at least 220°C.
  • PTFE and PPS are preferred because of ready availability in filamentary form for fabrication into fabric. It is surprising that fabric of TFE polymer can be used without the PTFE particles from the coagulate or the resultant fine powder sticking to the fabric, because PTFE is known to stick to PTFE and the PTFE particles are sticky themselves.
  • the TFE polymer can be melt-fabricable TFE polymer; PTFE aqueous dispersion can also provide a continuous coating of polymer.
  • the process of the present invention is conducted by forming a shallow bed of the PTFE coagulate on the fabric surface. Generally the thickness of the bed will range from 0.5 to 4cm. depending on the temperature of the heated air being used.
  • the bed should not be too thin because that would adversely affect production rate and increase cost, and not too thick because that increases the time needed for volatilization of the contaminants and risks interactions and discolorations described above. These thicknesses afford relatively easy passage of the heated air and volatiles through the bed in the direction from top to bottom.
  • the heated air is directed against the top surface of the bed, preferably over its entire surface whether the bed (and fabric support) is stationary as in a tray dryer or moving as in the case of a continuous belt.
  • This manner of exposure of the bed to heating causes the air flow to be in the direction from the top to the bottom of the bed and out through the openings in the fabric.
  • the contaminants volatilizing at the temperatures used, developing within the bed follow the same path.
  • the flow of heated air thus carries off the volatiles from the bed.
  • the time of exposure will be that which is effective for the particular bed thickness, temperature and air flow that is used to effect substantially complete removal of the water and surfactant. Exposure times of 10 to 20 minutes may be all that is necessary.
  • the amount of air flow will be adjusted for the particular temperature and bed thickness used to cause the water and other contaminants to volatilize simultaneously, rather than permitting the water to be driven off from the bed prior to volatilizing the contaminants, because sequential volatilization tends to leave an unacceptable amount of other contaminants behind in the PTFE fine powder, which persists in the powder even after further exposure to heated air.
  • Simultaneous volatilization means that water and other contaminants are volatilizing at the same time, but it is not believed that water vapor must be present at the end of the volatilization of all the ot ci contaminants.
  • the resultant PTFE fine powder will generally have a water content of less than 0.05wt%, surfactant content of less than lOppm, based on the total weight of the PTFE fine powder, and an initiator and wax content which is so small as to be virtually undetectable.
  • the purification process can be practiced in a tray dryer heated to 190°C, wherein a bed of PTFE coagulate having the initiator, surfactant, and wax impurities described hereinbefore is formed to a depth of 5 to 10mm on a test fabric which is supported on a metal perforated tray. Air heated at 190°C is directed pe ⁇ endicularly at the entire top of the bed for about 20 minutes to obtain the purity hereinbefore described. The resultant PTFE fine powder is easily removed from the fabric by just turning the tray upside-down.
  • the PPS fabric was 0.157cm thick, was made of PPS filaments, 30 yarns/2.54cm in the machine direction and 33 yarns/2.54cm in the cross direction, with the machine direction yam have a cross- section measuring 0.5 x 0.88mm (thickness and width) and the cross machine yam having a 0.66mm diameter.
  • the purification procedure has also been practiced using fabric as support for PTFE coagulate in a continuous dryer under similar conditions as in the tray dryer and for about the same amount of exposure to the heated air to obtain equivalent purification results.

Abstract

Polytetrafluoroethylene coagulate obtained from aqueous dispersion polymerization of tetrafluoroethylene in the presence of volatile initiator, surfactant, and possibly wax, is purified of these contaminants by exposing the coagulate to heated air with the coagulate being formed as a shallow bed on a fabric of polymer filament, the heated air passing through the bed from top to bottom to volatilize the contaminants including the water content of the coagulate and thereby cause them to leave the bed through openings in the fabric.

Description

TITLE
PURIFICATION PROCESS
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the purification, including drying, of polytetrafluoroethylene of the type prepared by aqueous dispersion polymerization of tetrafluoroethylene. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prepared by aqueous dispersion polymerization in the presence of initiator and surfactant and possibly wax adjuvant is coagulated to form a coagulate of small particles having a diameter on the order of 10-1000 microns. This coagulate, after separation from the bulk of the water, is still contaminated with water, polymerization initiator, surfactant and such other ingredients such as wax, if present. These contaminants have to be removed to the extent that the resultant PTFE fine powder is useful for fabrication into defect-free articles.
Heretofore the PTFE coagulate has been purified by applying it as a shallow bed on the surface of a special paper made of plant fibers and exposing this shallow bed to a flow of heated air, e.g. at least 160°C, through the thickness of the bed, from top to bottom, whereby the contaminants described above volatilize and exit the bed as vapors though openings in the paper at the bottom of the bed, followed by removal of the resultant PTFE fine powder from the surface of the paper. The particles readily separate from the paper surface, leaving behind the paper, itself now contaminated by absorption of at least some of the contaminants, notably surfactant and initiator. Such paper cannot be re-used because of inability to withstand multiple cycles of exposure to the hot air and the problem of the contaminated paper re-contaminating a second batch (bed) of PTFE placed on the paper for purification. Thus, the present process has the problems of cost in continuously replacing the paper support for new batches of PTFE to be freed of contamination and the expense of special precautions being necessary for disposal of the contaminated paper.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention solves this problem by applying the polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) coagulate which contains volatile contaminants comprising water, polymerization initiator, surfactant and optionally, wax, as a shallow bed on the surface of a fabric, exposing the shallow bed to flow of heated air through the thickness of the bed from top to bottom to volatilize said contaminants, said fabric comprising polymer at least at its surface and being thermally and dimensionally stable at the temperature of the heated air, said fabric having openings therein tυ pcmm uic passage of said air and volatilized contaminants, thereby removing said contaminants from said bed to thereby form PTFE fine powder from said coagulate, the openings in the fabric not permitting the passage of said fine powder therethrough, and removing the fine powder from said surface.
The fabric forming the surface for this purification process does not absorb the contaminants and because of its heat resistance, is reusable for purification of subsequent charges of PTFE coagulate, thereby saving disposal cost.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The process of polymerizing PTFE in an aqueous dispersion in the presence of initiator and surfactant and such other ingredients as wax which serves as an adjuvant to the polymerization process and recovery of PTFE coagulate from the resultant emulsion of PTFE particles and coagulating this dispersion is conventional. The PTFE coagulate will normally contain at least about 30% water, at least about 0.0001% polymerization initiator such as ammonium persulfate, and at least about 0.0005% surfactant such as ammonium perfluorooctanoate, all %s being based on the weight of the coagulate. Additional contaminant may be present such as wax in an amount such as at least about 0.005wt%.
The PTFE of the coagulate and fine powder obtained therefrom can be polytetrafluoroethylene homopolymer or copolymer of tetrafluoroethylene with small amounts of one or more copolymerizable comonomers as are well known in the art, such as hexafluoropropylene, perfluoro(alkyl vinyl ether) wherein the alkyl group contains from 1 to 5 carbon atoms, preferably 3 carbon atoms, and perfluorobutyl ethylene, to nevertheless provide hon-melt fabricable polymer.
In accordance with the present invention the paper formerly used to support the PTFE coagulate during purification is replaced by the fabric described above.
The fabric can be in such form as the liner of a perforated pan used for tray drying in an oven or as a continuous belt operating within an oven, in which case the process steps are carried out continuously, e^, continuously applying the coagulate at one end of the path of the belt, continuously removing the purified PTFE fine powder from the opposite end of the path of the belt, and continuously exposing the shallow bed of coagulate to the heated air as it passes along the path from the one end to the opposite end. In either form, the fabric is the immediate support for the coagulate and can be re-used for purifying additional polymer.
The fabric can be on any construction, e.g. knit, spunbonded, or woven, which provides the dimensional integrity needed, depending on the form of the fabric used. The fabric will be made of yarn in the case of knit or woven constructions and generally fibers in the spunbonded construction. The yarn or fibers making up me fabric, as the case may be provide openings between the yarn or fibers making up the fabric for passage of the heated air during the purification process, while supporting the PTFE coagulate/fine powder particles thereon, e^ the openings do not permit the PTFE fine powder to pass therethrough. While the openings in the fabric should be small in order to hold the PTFE fine powder, such openings should also be large enough to permit the passage of the heated air and contaminants volatized thereby at a sufficient rate to result in a reasonable time for exposure to the hot air to effect the purification. Unduly extended exposure may cause decomposition of and or interaction between contaminants either within the bed of coagulate/fine powder or on the surface of the fabric, which manifests itself as "spotting" or discoloration of the PTFE fine powder present on the fabric either at that time or at a later time. Thus it is preferred that the fabric permit an air flow of at least about 75 CFM (0.021 mVmin), preferably at least 100CFM (0.28m3/min). Air flows up to about 200CFM (0.057 m3/min) can be used without particles from the coagulate or the resultant fine powder falling through or becoming lodged in the openings in the fabric. The air flows through the fabric disclosed herein are determined by the permeability procedure of ASTM-D737 at a pressure differential of 0.5in (1.27 cm) of water across the thickness of the fabric. While PTFE is known for its non-stick property, in the form of coagulate and the fine powder obtained therefrom, the polymer is notoriously sticky possibly because of the fibrillar nature of this form of PTFE. When the support surface for the coagulate is metal such as stainless steel, exposure of the coagulate to heated air to remove contaminants causes the resultant PTFE fine powder to adhere tenaciously to the metal surface even when it is in the form of a perforated plate which presents a smooth surface to the bed of PTFE coagulate. This experience would suggest that a fabric which by its nature tends to present a non-smooth surface to the PTFE coagulate would obtain the same result.
Surprisingly, the PTFE fine powder resulting from the purification process essentially does not stick to the polymer surface of the fabric. The PTFE fine powder is readily removable therefrom by gravity, Le„ turning the tray upside down causes the PTFE particles to fall away from the fabric. In the case of the fabric being a continous belt, passage of the fabric (belt) around a small diameter roll, e.g. 5cm in diameter, causes the particles of PTFE to fall away from the belt. Should a few particles stay behind on the belt, possibly because of fibrils of the particles mechanically engaging the openings in the fabric, removal can be assisted by a vacuum of the bed side of the belt and air knife on the underside of the belt aimed at the vacuum collection area. Thus, a clean fabric is presented to new charges of PTFE coagulate applied thereon for purification. Easy removal of the PTFE fine powder from the fabric surface is important so that the powder is not subject to shear during such removal; snear oi e particles at this point in their processing would adversely affect subsequent processing and properties of product fabricated therefrom.
The yarn of the fabric is preferably made of filaments rather than fibers so as to contribute to the cleanliness of the fabric by it not serving as a source of contamination of the PTFE fine powder, e.g. there are no fibers to separate from the yarn to become part of the PTFE fine powder and product fabricated therefrom. Fabric made of fiber yarn, however, can be given filamentary character by application of a continuous coating of thermally stable polymer. Spunbonded fabric made from polymer fibers can be hot calendared to cause compression of the thickness of the fabric and the entangled fibers to become further anchored within the fabric by bonding together, to provide a non-contaminating fabric useful in the present invention.
The thermal and dimensional stability of the filaments or fiber making up the fabric is available from such polymers as tetrafluoroethylene (TFE) polymer, polyetherether ketone (PEEK), polyphenylene sulfide (PPS), and aramid such as poly(m-phenyleneisophthalamide), and poly(p-phenyleneterephthalamide). Examples of the TFE polymers are PTFE as described above with respect to the polymerization process and resultant coagulate and high melting but melt-fabricable tetrafluoroethylene polymers which can be copolymers of TFE with one or more of the monomers mentioned above in sufficient amount to provide the melt-fabricable character. For low temperature purification operation, e.g. 160°C, lower melting TFE polymer can be used, such as TFE/ethylene polymer; an additional low melting polymer that could be used is ethylene/chlorotrifluoroethylene polymer. The filaments from which the fabric can be made can be made of non-polymeric material such as glass fiber yarn, which is thermally and dimensionally stable, with the fabric or yarn being coated with a continuous coating of thermally stable polymer to give not only filamentary character to the glass fiber yarn making up the fabric, but polymer character as well. In this embodiment, the demands of thermal and dimensional stability for the polymer can be somewhat less than if the polymer made up the entire fabric.
The reference to the fabric herein being made of polymer filaments thus contemplates such filaments being composites of fibers, polymeric and non-polymeric, with a polymer coating, as well as polymer filaments which are made entirely of polymeric filamentary material. The presence of the continuous coating of polymer making up the composite filament means that the coating on the filament is continuous, but not that the openings in the fabric are closed by the polymer coating.
The thermal stability of the polymer or any other material used to make the fabric should exist at the temperatures of exposure of the fabric to the heated air, such temperatures being usually within the range of 110 to 200°C, preferably 160 to 200°C. tjy thermal and dimensional stability is meant that the fabric does not soncπ υr men υr decompose, but does retain its size and shape. When the fabric is made entirely of polymer, whether polymer fiber, polymer coated fiber yarn or polymer yarn of one or more filament, then the polymer must exhibit this dimensional stability. Temperatures at which the fabric and/or the polymer in the fabric are thermally and dimensionally stable can be considered the use temperature thereof. Preferably, the melting point of the polymer and its use temperature should be at least 220°C. PTFE and PPS are preferred because of ready availability in filamentary form for fabrication into fabric. It is surprising that fabric of TFE polymer can be used without the PTFE particles from the coagulate or the resultant fine powder sticking to the fabric, because PTFE is known to stick to PTFE and the PTFE particles are sticky themselves. When the TFE polymer is selected for coating a fabric made of fiber yarn, the polymer can be melt-fabricable TFE polymer; PTFE aqueous dispersion can also provide a continuous coating of polymer. The process of the present invention is conducted by forming a shallow bed of the PTFE coagulate on the fabric surface. Generally the thickness of the bed will range from 0.5 to 4cm. depending on the temperature of the heated air being used. The bed should not be too thin because that would adversely affect production rate and increase cost, and not too thick because that increases the time needed for volatilization of the contaminants and risks interactions and discolorations described above. These thicknesses afford relatively easy passage of the heated air and volatiles through the bed in the direction from top to bottom.
The heated air is directed against the top surface of the bed, preferably over its entire surface whether the bed (and fabric support) is stationary as in a tray dryer or moving as in the case of a continuous belt. This manner of exposure of the bed to heating causes the air flow to be in the direction from the top to the bottom of the bed and out through the openings in the fabric. The contaminants volatilizing at the temperatures used, developing within the bed, follow the same path. The flow of heated air thus carries off the volatiles from the bed. The time of exposure will be that which is effective for the particular bed thickness, temperature and air flow that is used to effect substantially complete removal of the water and surfactant. Exposure times of 10 to 20 minutes may be all that is necessary.
The amount of air flow will be adjusted for the particular temperature and bed thickness used to cause the water and other contaminants to volatilize simultaneously, rather than permitting the water to be driven off from the bed prior to volatilizing the contaminants, because sequential volatilization tends to leave an unacceptable amount of other contaminants behind in the PTFE fine powder, which persists in the powder even after further exposure to heated air. Simultaneous volatilization means that water and other contaminants are volatilizing at the same time, but it is not believed that water vapor must be present at the end of the volatilization of all the ot ci contaminants. In addition, because of the relatively large amount of water present and its lower boiling point than the vaporization temperature of at least some of the other contaminants, some amount of water may volatilze prior to the other contaminants starting to volatilize. Thus, the drying of the PTFE fine powder which results from the purification process of the present invention is only part of the overall process.
The resultant PTFE fine powder will generally have a water content of less than 0.05wt%, surfactant content of less than lOppm, based on the total weight of the PTFE fine powder, and an initiator and wax content which is so small as to be virtually undetectable.
By way of example, the purification process can be practiced in a tray dryer heated to 190°C, wherein a bed of PTFE coagulate having the initiator, surfactant, and wax impurities described hereinbefore is formed to a depth of 5 to 10mm on a test fabric which is supported on a metal perforated tray. Air heated at 190°C is directed peφendicularly at the entire top of the bed for about 20 minutes to obtain the purity hereinbefore described. The resultant PTFE fine powder is easily removed from the fabric by just turning the tray upside-down.
This procedure has been practiced on a number of fabrics having permeabilities from 0.028 m3/min to 0.057 m3/min, made from a number of different materials, e.g. PTFE, PPS, PEEK, and Nomex® aramid fiber in the form of hot calendared spunbonded fabric available as type 309H, all with the aforesaid purification result and with the fabrics withstanding repeated purification cycles and being free of contaminants even after repeated cycles. In particular, the PPS fabric was 0.157cm thick, was made of PPS filaments, 30 yarns/2.54cm in the machine direction and 33 yarns/2.54cm in the cross direction, with the machine direction yam have a cross- section measuring 0.5 x 0.88mm (thickness and width) and the cross machine yam having a 0.66mm diameter.
The purification procedure has also been practiced using fabric as support for PTFE coagulate in a continuous dryer under similar conditions as in the tray dryer and for about the same amount of exposure to the heated air to obtain equivalent purification results.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. Process for purification of a polytetrafluoroethylene coagulate which contains volatile contaminants comprising water, polymerization initiator, and surfactant, and optionally, wax, comprising applying said coagulate as a shallow bed on the surface of a fabric, exposing the shallow bed to a flow of heated air through the thickness of the fabric in the direction from the top of the bed to its bottom to volatilize said contaminants, said fabric comprising polymer at least at its surface and being thermally and dimensionally stable at the temperature of the heated air, said fabric having openings therein to permit the passage of the heated air and volatilized contaminants, thereby removing said contaminants from said bed to thereby form PTFE fine powder from said coagulate, the openings in said fabric not permitting the passage of said fine powder therethrough, and removing the resultant purified fine powder from said surface.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein the said polymer is selected from the group consisting of tetrafluoroethylene polymer, polyphenylene sulfide, or polyetherether ketone.
3. The process of claim 1 wherein said polymer is in the form of filament yam.
4. The process of claim 1 wherein said polymer is in the form of continuous coating on fiber yam.
5. The process of claim 1 wherein said fabric is spiunbonded and hot calendared.
6. The process of claim 5 wherein said fabric is formed from aramid fiber.
7. The process of claim 1 wherein said fabric is in the form of a continuous belt, and the applying, exposing, and removing process steps are carried out continuously.
8. The process of claim 1 wherein the temperature of the heated air is 110 to 200°C.
9. The process of claim 8 wherein the polymer has a use temperature of at least 220°C.
PCT/US1994/013055 1993-11-17 1994-11-14 Purification process WO1995014047A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

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JP51452895A JP3621103B2 (en) 1993-11-17 1994-11-14 Purification method
DE69407818T DE69407818T2 (en) 1993-11-17 1994-11-14 CLEANING PROCEDURE
EP95901874A EP0729479B1 (en) 1993-11-17 1994-11-14 Purification process

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US08/154,218 1993-11-17
US08/154,218 US5391709A (en) 1993-11-17 1993-11-17 Purification process of PTFE using fiber bed and heated air

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WO1995014047A1 true WO1995014047A1 (en) 1995-05-26

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JP (1) JP3621103B2 (en)
DE (1) DE69407818T2 (en)
WO (1) WO1995014047A1 (en)

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EP1567563B1 (en) * 2002-11-08 2007-06-27 E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company Reaction of fluoropolymer melts
US6838545B2 (en) * 2002-11-08 2005-01-04 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Reaction of fluoropolymer melts
EP1889855B1 (en) * 2005-05-02 2010-04-14 Daikin Industries, Ltd. Method for producing fluorine-containing polymer
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US20130303709A1 (en) 2012-05-09 2013-11-14 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Fluoropolymer Dispersion Treatment Employing High pH and Oxygen Source to Reduce Fluoropolymer Resin Discoloration
WO2013169581A1 (en) 2012-05-09 2013-11-14 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Fluoropolymer resin treatment employing oxidizing agent to reduce discoloration
US20130303708A1 (en) 2012-05-09 2013-11-14 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Fluoropolymer Dispersion Treatment Employing Hypochlorite Salts or Nitrite Salts to Reduce Fluoropolymer Resin Discoloration
US8785560B2 (en) 2012-05-09 2014-07-22 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Employing pretreatment and fluorination of fluoropolymer resin to reduce discoloration
US9175110B2 (en) 2012-05-09 2015-11-03 The Chemours Company Fc, Llc Fluoropolymer resin treatment employing melt extrusion and exposure to oxygen source to reduce discoloration
US8785516B2 (en) 2012-05-09 2014-07-22 E I Du Pont De Nemours And Company Fluoropolymer dispersion treatment employing ultraviolet light and oxygen source to reduce fluoropolymer resin discoloration
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US9175112B2 (en) 2012-05-09 2015-11-03 The Chemours Company Fc, Llc Drying wet fluoropolymer resin and exposing to oxygen source to reduce discoloration
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US9574027B2 (en) 2013-03-11 2017-02-21 The Chemours Company Fc, Llc Fluoropolymer resin treatment employing sorbent to reduce fluoropolymer resin discoloration
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0729479A1 (en) 1996-09-04
JPH09505343A (en) 1997-05-27
DE69407818T2 (en) 1998-08-13
DE69407818D1 (en) 1998-02-12
US5391709A (en) 1995-02-21
EP0729479B1 (en) 1998-01-07
JP3621103B2 (en) 2005-02-16

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