Abstract

AbstractThe kinetics of the thermal degradation of solid powdered poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) under nitrogen was studied by thermogravimetry, rate of hydrogen chloride evolution, and rate of polyene sequence formation. These results are accommodated by a chain mechanism involving initiation by random dehydrochlorination at normal monomer residues of PVC, and a series of intermediates, each leaking to a stable conjugated polyene sequence. Structural irregularities such as allylic and tertiary chlorine are responsible for a fast initiation process at the very beginning of the degradation. Mean rate constants and activation parameters for random initiation, propagation, and termination reactions of the PVC degradation chain were calculated by simulation. Activation enthalpy/entropy correlations for the experimental data available for dehydrochlorination of chloroalkanes and chloroalkenes in the gas and in the liquid phase or nonpolar solvents and elementary reactions of PVC degradation show that initiation is an HCl elimination through a transition state of four centers requiring a synperiplanar conformation of the >CH–CCl< group, whereas propagation is a dehydrochlorination through a transition state of six centers requiring a cis configuration of the double bond.

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