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Decomposition of burning polytetrafluoroethylene
Author(s) -
Fenimore C. P.,
Jones G. W.
Publication year - 1969
Publication title -
journal of applied polymer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.575
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-4628
pISSN - 0021-8995
DOI - 10.1002/app.1969.070130202
Subject(s) - rod , decomposition , polymer , polytetrafluoroethylene , monomer , depolymerization , fluorine , oxygen , carbon fibers , polymerization , materials science , phase (matter) , chemistry , polymer chemistry , chemical engineering , composite material , organic chemistry , composite number , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , engineering
PTFE rods, 0.6–3.8 cm diameter, were burnt from the top downwards in a gently rising atmosphere of oxygen. The burning was only possible in concentrated oxygen, or at elevated temperature or pressure. At its surface temperature of 920 ± 25°K, the polymer evolved monomeric C 2 F 4 which oxidized in a surrounding gas flame; 15–35% of all the carbon in the gas was found present as monomer just above the larger rods. Depolymerization of the solid was not its only mode of decomposition, however. The heat radiated and conducted from the flame into the condensed phase was too little to depolymerize it completely, and heterogeneous reactions with species from the gas phase must also have contributed to the decomposition. Overall, the polymer burnt in O 2 , but the gaseous reactant which attacked the surface need not have been O 2 or O in all cases, for these rare species just above the larger rods. Elemental fluorine was present in the gas even when elemental oxygen was absent, and calculations indicate that F atoms would be a major flame species at equilibrium. It is possible that heterogeneous attack by flame generated F atoms consumed part of the polymer and also supplied energy to help depolymerize the rest.