Abstract

AbstractThermal degradation of poly(arylene sulfone)s had been studied by the combination of thermogravimetric analysis/mass spectrometry (TG/MS) with pyrolysis/gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py‐GC/MS) techniques. Through these two methods, the pyrolysates from poly(ether sulfone) (PES) and polysulfone (PSF) were identified in 11 and 21 sets of evolution curves, respectively, from room temperature to 900 °C. Among these pyrolysates, 12 products from PES and 25 products from PSF were obtained. The major mechanism for both PES and PSF was one‐stage pyrolysis involving main chain random scission and carbonization with evolution of SO2 and phenol as major products. Although the initial thermal stability of PES was lower than that of PSF, the formation of sulfide groups in the condensed phase from PES, through reduction of sulfone group by hydrogen radicals, increased the fire retardation behavior of PES. In PES, the ether and sulfone groups showed similar thermal stability. The thermal stability of functional groups in PSF were in the order of sulfone < ether < isopropylidene group. The scission of the ether group in PSF, with evolution of phenol as the major product, reached maximum evolution amount at the temperature of the maximum thermogravimetry loss of TG (Tmax). The scission of isopropylidene groups at high temperature (>580 °C) evolved higher mass derivatives that lower the fire retardancy of PSF. By using a simplified kinetic model, PES showed maximum activation energy with a conversion ratio of 0.2–0.3, which implies a high fire retardant effect of sulfide formation in PES. A comparative study with the proposed model and experimental data showed the theoretical pyrolysis curves to be in agreement with the experimental curves for PES and PSF pyrolysis, respectively. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 81: 2387–2398, 2001

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