Ye-Tang Pan and
De-Yi Wang*
IMDEA Materials Institute, C/Eric Kandel, 2, 28906 Getafe, Madrid, Spain. E-mail: deyi.wang@imdea.org; Fax: +34 915503047; Tel: +34 915493422-1055
First published on 12th March 2015
In this article, zinc carbonate with a nano size (nano ZnCO3) was prepared by the reaction of zinc nitrite and urea in a one step hydrothermal synthesis. The effects of antimony trioxide (Sb2O3), nano ZnCO3 and their mixture with different weight ratios on the flame retardancy of flexible poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) were studied by using a limiting oxygen index test (LOI), a vertical burning test (UL-94) and a cone calorimeter test (CCT). The thermal stability of flame retardant flexible PVC composites was detected by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Very interestingly, it was found that substituting 75% Sb2O3 with nano ZnCO3 in the flexible PVC obviously improved the dripping behavior in a UL-94 test, increased the LOI value and greatly reduced the peak heat release rate and total heat release simultaneously in comparison to using them separately, suggesting a significant synergistic effect between nano ZnCO3 and Sb2O3 on improving the flame retardancy of flexible PVC. Importantly, tensile tests showed the addition of nano ZnCO3 significantly enhanced the mechanical properties of flexible PVC. This work has offered a new approach to develop low or non Sb2O3 containing flame retardant flexible PVC composites.
Antimony trioxide (Sb2O3, named after AT in this paper) is a traditional flame retardant for flexible PVC in industry. It offers excellent flame retardancy to halogen containing polymers, such as PVC, due to the synergistic effect between antimony trioxide and halogenated compounds. However, antimony is a toxic element that does harm to human health seriously and under combustion conditions antimony compounds produce toxic or irritating vapors. Micro amounts of antimony, especially antimony(III) which is more toxic and mobile than antimony(V),4 will stimulate respiratory tract, mucous membrane of alimentary canal and skin, even lead to pulmonary edema or hepatomegal.5 Meanwhile, the toxicity of Sb also influences environment after solving in soil and impairs plant growth (root elongation of barley, shoot biomass of lettuce) and nitrification with certain concentration.6 Therefore, applying this flame retardant in PVC is harmful to environment and human health.
Nowadays, more and more researchers focus on the synergism between inorganic zinc compounds and Sb2O3, aiming to partly replace Sb2O3 and maintain the flame retardancy at the same time. In a cone calorimeter study investigated by Shen, in flexible PVC, partial replacement of antimony oxide with the zinc borate (ZB) reduced not only the peak of heat release rate (PHRR), but also the carbon monoxide production drastically at a heat flux of 35 kW m−2.7 Another synergism was observed by Schartel et al. for the combination of zinc sulfide (ZnS) and Sb2O3 as flame retardant for flexible PVC in cone calorimetry in terms of time to ignition, heat release rate, smoke production, mass loss and CO production. It was also found that a cooperative action of gas-phase (Sb2O3) and condensed phase (ZnS) mechanism was achieved. It is proved that the synergism of ZnS and Sb2O3 allows the possibility of replacing half of Sb2O3 by ZnS to reach equivalent flame retardancy.8 Qu et al. proved that Sb2O3 and zinc hydroxylstannate (ZHS) had a synergistic effect on the flame retardancy of flexible PVC. The LOI value for 5 phr Sb2O3/ZHS (weight ratio = 1
:
1) as flame retardant was 31.7% while the LOI value for 5 phr Sb2O3 was 30.8%. They presumed that ZHS acted as a flame retardant in the solid phase, cooperating with the vapor-phase action of Sb2O3, so ZHS and Sb2O3 generated synergistic effects on the flame retardancy of flexible PVC.9
Since zinc element shows certain flame retardancy in flexible PVC, moreover, the synergistic effects of zinc compounds with Sb2O3 in PVC composites investigated before are not so obvious, thus the research on zinc compounds as flame retardant in flexible PVC is far from enough. Zinc carbonate (ZnCO3, named after ZC in this paper) is predicted to have great potential to make contribution to flame retarding PVC by an integration of Zn2+ and CO2 (dilute agent for combustible gases) released during decomposition. However, the synthesis of corresponding product in industry, zinc carbonate hydroxide [Zn(OH)2·xZnCO3], consists of multiple steps. Meanwhile, its decomposition temperature due to the existed hydroxyl started at about 150 °C which is lower than the processing temperature for flexible PVC (170 °C).10 Therefore, the commercial product may be not suitable to be used as flame retardant in flexible PVC. Zinc carbonate without hydroxyl needs to be synthesized for the sake of enhancing thermal stability in terms of PVC processing. To our best knowledge, there is no relevant report on one-step synthesis of ZnCO3 in hydrothermal condition and addition into flexible PVC as flame retardant. Consequently, in this article, an attempt to replace part of harmful Sb2O3 in flame retardant flexible PVC composite by using nanometric ZC was studied. The synergistic effect between ZC and Sb2O3 on the flame retardancy of flexible PVC composites was discussed. Thermal stability, flame retardancy and mechanical property of flexible PVC composites were investigated. Also the mechanism of synergistic effect of nano ZC and Sb2O3 flame retarding flexible PVC was proposed.
![]() | ||
Fig. 2 FIB-FEGSEM images of synthesized ZC: (a) 20 000×; (b) 50 000× and its particle size distribution (c). | ||
The precipitation process of zinc nitrite and urea under normal pressure and temperature formed Zn4CO3(OH)6·H2O (JCPDS file 005-0664).11,12 In comparison, the hydrothermal method provided sufficient conditions to impel urea to hydrolyze thoroughly in order to generate CO32− and react with Zn2+ via replacement reaction without any OH− existing in the final product. It could be elucidated by following process:
| (NH)2CO + 2H2O → 2NH4+ + CO32− |
| Zn2+ + CO32− → ZnCO3↓ |
Fig. 3 exhibited the cross section of PVC-4 composite containing AT/ZC at weight ratio 1
:
3. The compositions of the spread particles on the surface were evidenced by EDS point detection. It can be seen that micrometric AT with 1–2 μm particle size possessed random distribution while nanometric ZC with much less than 1 μm particle size evenly dispersed in the composite. It illuminated the fine size of ZC is beneficial to the uniform distribution in the composite system.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 4 TGA curves of flexible PVC composites and as-synthesized ZC and DTG curves of flexible PVC composites. | ||
The thermal decomposition of flexible PVC composites is divided into two stages as shown in Fig. 4. The first stage is ascribed to the dehydrochlorination of the polymer chain and plasticizer degradation.13 And the second stage mainly involves cyclization of conjugated polyene sequences to form aromatic compounds.8 As shown in Fig. 4 and Table 2, the onset decomposition temperatures (T5%, temperature at 5% weight loss) of PVC-4 and PVC-5 were obviously lower than PVC-0, while on the contrary, the T5% of PVC-1 was slightly higher than PVC-0. This finding is illustrated with the assumption that ZC might react with the HCl released from PVC to form ZnCl2 which is a strong Lewis acid and it might catalyze the dehydrochlorination and promote the early crosslinking to the PVC compound. Whereas for PVC-1, AT didn't decompose and melt at the low temperature, therefore the onset decomposition temperature of PVC-1 was increased. The temperatures at the maximum rate of weight loss at the first stage of decomposition (Tmax1) of PVC-4 and PVC-5 decreased by about 25 °C than those of PVC-0 and PVC-1, while the temperatures at the maximum rate of weight loss at the second stage of decomposition (Tmax2) of PVC-4 and PVC-5 were nearly the same with those of PVC-0 and PVC-1. These results revealed that the stability of the residue was enhanced, although the enhancement was not so marked due to the low adding amount of ZC (2.4 wt% and 3.2 wt% respectively). The residue of PVC-1 kept similar with that of PVC-0, caused by that AT played its role in the gas phase as flame retardant for PVC. When ZC was added, both residues of PVC-4 and PVC-5 increased significantly by around 33 wt% in comparison to the sample without treating with ZC. The results showed that the main role of ZC in PVC degradation was to catalyze dehydrochlorination, promote early cross-linking in the first stage, and enhance the char stability in the second stage. To the aspect of the formation of residues, ZC improved the thermal stability of the composite.
| Sample | T5% (°C) | Tmax1 (°C) | Tmax2 (°C) | Residue at 750 °C (wt%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a T5%, temperature at 5% weight loss; Tmax1, temperature at the maximum rate of weight loss at the first stage of decomposition; Tmax2, temperature at the maximum rate of weight loss at the second stage of decomposition. | ||||
| PVC-0 | 271 | 289 | 465 | 15.4 |
| PVC-1 | 277 | 291 | 463 | 15.5 |
| PVC-4 | 252 | 264 | 462 | 20.9 |
| PVC-5 | 251 | 261 | 466 | 21.7 |
:
1, 1
:
1 to 1
:
3, respectively, the LOI values increased gradually; PVC-4 in which AT/ZC is at 1
:
3 presented the highest value up to 36.7% among all the composites. Thereby, synergistic flame retardancy as a result existed in the combination of AT and ZC for flexible PVC composites.
Vertical burning test (UL-94) was also taken into account to test the flammability of flexible PVC composites. The sample sheets in the typical run and in this work differ in the thickness. In terms of the inherent flame retardancy of PVC, the UL-94 test was always ignored and deemed to be meaningless by most reports. Unlike the typical run, the sample sheets adopted in this work were thin films with the thickness of only 0.6 mm instead of conventional 3.2 mm. By this way, the difference could be observed readily during combustion of the samples. The results are labeled in Fig. 5. During the test, PVC-0 burnt very fast with dripping happened and was not self-extinguished after the removal of burner. Things changed better in the presence of AT: the sample reached a V-0 rating but dripping emerged again (not ignite the cotton). The same thing occurred on PVC-2 as well. With the increasing amount of ZC in PVC composites, all the samples (PVC-3, 4, 5) passed UL-94 test with a V-0 rating accompanied with no dripping phenomenon happened. The dripping of PVC-0, PVC-1 and PVC-2 in vertical burning test might be due to the fragile char layer formed during the combustion, which was not tough enough to make it as an integrated part throughout. The improvement of PVC-3 and PVC-4 in UL-94 test along with LOI test was attributed distinctly to the synergistic effect of AT and ZC in flexible PVC. The ZC promoted char forming to block the release of combustible gases to protect the polymer underneath and CO2 emitting might dilute the fuel gases to inhibit the combustion, while AT acted as a scavenger to capture free radicals in order to stop the flame reaction. As a summary, the flame retardant AT/ZC (weight ratio at 1
:
3) performed highest efficiency on flexible PVC in the LOI and UL-94 tests.
| Sample | TTI (s) | PHRR (kW m−2) | THR (MJ m−2) | Char residue (wt%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a TTI, time to ignition; PHRR, peak of heat release rate; THR, total heat release. | ||||
| PVC-0 | 20 ± 0 | 218 ± 9 | 81 ± 4 | 11.9 ± 0.4 |
| PVC-1 | 25 ± 1 | 192 ± 3 | 84 ± 2 | 9.6 ± 0.7 |
| PVC-2 | 38 ± 1 | 161 ± 6 | 67 ± 3 | 14.6 ± 0.3 |
| PVC-3 | 36 ± 1 | 170 ± 5 | 57 ± 4 | 15.6 ± 0.3 |
| PVC-4 | 37 ± 1 | 149 ± 4 | 53 ± 3 | 17.1 ± 0.5 |
| PVC-5 | 26 ± 2 | 159 ± 4 | 57 ± 2 | 16.6 ± 0.4 |
Flexible PVC's HRR curve (Fig. 6a) showed that the composite burnt very violently after ignition, indicating its tinder property. PHRR is an important parameter to evaluate the intensity of fires.17 The sharp HRR peak of PVC-0 appeared with PHRR of 218 kW m−2, then the value decreased slightly in the case of AT, while with the addition of ZC, the composites showed different degrees of PHRR reduction mainly ascribing to probable effect caused by fine size ZC. This phenomenon pointed out that the presence of ZC weakened the intensity of fires in flexible PVC system. Among all the samples, the PHRR of PVC-4 significantly reduced to 149 kW m−2 which was a reduction of 31.7% compared with that of PVC-0. Also, PVC-4's HRR curve described a much milder burning procedure. Furthermore, PVC-4 released less heat than all the other samples and reduced THR strikingly from 81 MJ m−2 to 53 MJ m−2. As shown in Fig. 6b, no matter in any time period PVC-4 had the lowest THR value which meant the burning rate of heat release of PVC-4 was relatively slow. It is assumed that specific surface area might play a key role in cone calorimeter test. Nanoscale additive with larger surface area may make the path length longer that the transfer of oxygen and combustible gases was inhibited, leading to retard heat release.18 In addition, it seemed Sb2O3 produced little efficiency in reducing heat release of burning flexible PVC.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 6 Cone calorimeter data of flexible PVC composites: (a) heat release rate curves; (b) total heat release curves; (c) weight loss curves. | ||
The most noteworthy results from the cone calorimeter came from the difference of prolonged TTI of PVC-2, PVC-3 and PVC-4 as compared with those of PVC-1 and PVC-5. The result is so interesting that it's worthy to have a further discussion. The sole flame retardant flexible PVC composites extended the TTI from 20 s to 26 s. In contrast, the compounded flame retardants delayed the ignition time markedly (from 36 to 38 s) while the flame retardants used separately had no such effect. A proposed mechanism is as follows: ZC might have a capability to catalyze dehydrochlorination of PVC to generate HCl and synchronously AT melted at high temperature to react with HCl to form SbCl3 (gas phase) which is an effective vapor-phase flame inhibitor in order to stop the flame reaction, hence contribute to the flame retardancy thereby postpone the time to ignition.
Fig. 6c showed the mass loss as a function of combustion time. The decrease of residue of PVC-1 compared with that of PVC-0 proved that AT did not contribute to the char forming. The increases of char residue of PVC-4 and PVC-5 were consistent with the results in the LOI test that demonstrated ZC might promote early cross-linking of PVC to form char layer which limited the heat and mass exchange between gas and solid phases, as a result, contributed to the flame retardancy.
The surface morphology of the char residues collected after cone calorimeter test was also investigated with SEM. The digital photographs and SEM images of char residues are shown in Fig. 7. The morphology of the char formed in PVC-0 had honeycomb structure with many tiny pores, and the char formed in AT-treated PVC-1 was brittle with pores existing also. However, the morphology of the char formed after combustion of PVC containing ZC is quite different from aforementioned two samples. A large quantity of small flakes was detected evenly distributed on the surface of the char residue. These recognized flakes should be ZnO generated from decomposition of ZC. The abnormal scene has the great possibility to inspire a new method to synthesize ZnO by the combustion of Zn-treated polymer. The uniform distribution of the flakes implied the nanometric ZC dispersed well in PVC polymer system correlated with the SEM image of cross section belong to PVC-4 shown before. Moreover, the char residues of PVC-4 and PVC-5 were dense, continuous and tough. These dense structures were presumed to form barriers to inhibit combustible gases and transfer of heat energy to the PVC bulk which is beneficial in improving flame retardancy.
| Sample | Tensile strength at yield (MPa) | Elongation at break (%) | Young modulus (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PVC-0 | 11.8 ± 1 | 175 ± 4 | 138 ± 4 |
| PVC-1 | 13.8 ± 1 | 156 ± 3 | 216 ± 4 |
| PVC-4 | 15.9 ± 1 | 224 ± 5 | 247 ± 6 |
| PVC-5 | 16.6 ± 1 | 224 ± 7 | 236 ± 3 |
:
3 exhibited highest efficiency in fire tests: LOI value increased from 25% to 36.7%; passed V-0 rating without dripping; PHRR decreased from 218 kW m−2 to 149 kW m−2 and THR reduced from 81 MJ m−2 to 53 MJ m−2. Moreover, nano ZnCO3 was also beneficial to improve tensile property of flexible PVC composites. Owing to the apparently synergistic effect, using nano ZnCO3 replaced 75% Sb2O3 in the flame retardant PVC system and significantly reduced the harm caused by Sb2O3. These results have been offering a promising solution for developing new generation low and/or non Sb2O3 containing flame retardant flexible PVC materials.
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015 |