Abstract

Abstract Poly(vinylidene chloride) — PVDC — and poly(vinyl chloride) — PVC — reacted with pitches at elevated temperature with an increase in the yield of residual carbon; the greater the aromaticity and ‘fixed carbon’ of the pitch, the greater the increase. PVDC especially had a remarkable effect. This increase of residual carbon may be due to an increase in the molecular weight of pitch produced by its reaction with PVDC or PVC via dehydrochlorination. This tends to elevate the softening point and increase the insolubility in solvents. It is clearly indicated from i.r. spectra that reaction takes place mainly between aromatic hydrogen in the pitch and chlorine in PVDC. X-ray diffraction profiles of the reaction products show that the pitch forms hard (non-graphitizing) carbon as the PVDC content in the mixture increases.

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