专利摘要:
ethylene-based polymer composition, manufactured article, thermoplastic formulation and polymerization process an ethylene-based polymer composition was found characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than about 45. the new polymer-based compositions ethylene are useful for making many articles, especially films. the polymers are prepared using a metal complex of a polyvalent aryloxy ether.
公开号:BR112012022194B1
申请号:R112012022194
申请日:2011-03-02
公开日:2020-04-14
发明作者:Kardos Lori;Demirors Mehmet;Cong Rongjuan;Hayne Sarah;Karjala Teresa;Hermel-Davidock Theresa
申请人:Dow Global Technologies Inc;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

“ETHYLENE-BASED POLYMER COMPOSITION, MANUFACTURED ARTICLE, THERMOPLASTIC FORMULATION AND POLYMERIZATION PROCESS History of the invention [0001] There have been many varieties of polymerized polyethylene polymers over the years, including those prepared using high pressure free radical chemistry ( LDPE), most common linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE) typically prepared using ZieglerNatta catalysis or metallocene catalyzed polyethylene or constrained geometry catalyst. Some linear polyethylene, but also some substantially linear polyethylene, contain a small amount of long chain branching. Although these polymers have positive and negative variations - depending on the application or end use - more control over the polymeric structure is still desired.
[0002] We have now discovered that post-metallocene catalysts can efficiently polymerize ethylene in polymers and polymeric compositions having controlled comonomer distribution profiles, while also controlling levels of unsaturation in the polymer.
Brief summary of the invention [0003] The present invention provides a polymer composition based on ethylene, a method for producing it, and films prepared with it. In one embodiment, the invention is an ethylene-based polymer composition characterized by a comonomer distribution constant (CDC) greater than about 45, more preferably greater than 50, most preferably greater than 95, and as high as 400, for example. example, as high as 350, or
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/16
2/90 alternatively, as high as 300, or alternatively, as high as 250, or alternatively, as high as 200, with the composition having less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, for example, less than 110 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, 100 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, 80 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, 70 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C. Preferably, the composition has less than 15 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, for example, less than 12 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 10 units of unsubstituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 8 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 5 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C. I preferred Most likely, ethylene-based polymer compositions comprise up to about 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons, more preferably from about 0.01 to about 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons. The ethylene-based polymer composition can have a zero shear viscosity ratio (ZSVR) of at least 2 and / or less than 50. Ethylene-based polymer compositions can further be characterized by comprising less than 20 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, for example, less than 15 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively, less than 12 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively, less that 10 units of unsaturation of
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3/90 vinylidene / 1,000,000 C. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can have a bimodal molecular weight distribution (MWD) or a multimodal MWD. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may also have a monomodal MWD. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may have a comonomer distribution profile comprising a mono or bimodal distribution from 35 ° C to 120 ° C, excluding purging. The comonomer distribution profile is obtained by fractionation by elution with crystallization (CEF). The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may comprise a single melting peak by DSC. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may also comprise bimodal or multiple melting peaks. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can comprise a weight average molecular weight (M w ) of 17,000 to 220,000 g / mol, for example, 60,000 to 220,000 g / mol, from 70,000 to 140,000 g / mol.
[0004] Preferably, a film comprising the ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by having a yellowing change b * in 10 days less than or equal to 3, preferably less than or equal to 2, and especially less than or equal to 1 .
[0005] The present invention further provides a thermoplastic composition comprising the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition described above and, optionally, one or more polymers.
[0006] The present invention further provides a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, a
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4/90 or more polymers; and (2) optionally, one or more layers. [0007] The present invention further provides a multilayer structure comprising a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, one or more polymers ; and (2) optionally, one or more layers.
[0008] A storage device comprising a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, one or more polymers; and (2) optionally, one or more layers.
[0009] Articles made up of the new polymer compositions are also considered, especially in the form of at least one film layer. Other embodiments include thermoplastic formulations comprising the new polymer composition and at least one natural or synthetic polymer.
[0010] The ethylene-based polymer composition can at least partially cross-link ester (at least 5% by weight of gel).
[0011] In another embodiment, the present invention is a process comprising: (A) polymerizing ethylene and optionally one or more α-olefins in the presence of a first catalyst to form a semicrystalline ethylene-based polymer in a first reactor or a first part of a multi-part reactor; and (B) reacting newly supplied ethylene and optionally one or more αolefins in the presence of a second catalyst comprising
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5/90 an organometallic catalyst thus forming an ethylene-based polymer composition in at least one other reactor or in a later part of said multi-part reactor, the catalyst of (A) and (B) being the same or different and each is a metal complex of an aryloxy ether corresponding to the formula:
Q z where M is Ti, Hf or Zr, preferably Zr; at each occurrence Ar 4 is, independently, a substituted C9-20 aryl group, with each occurrence the substituents being independently selected from the group consisting of alkyl groups; cycloalkyl; and aryl derivatives thereof substituted by halogen, trihydrocarbil silyl and halohydrocarbyl, with the proviso that at least one substituent is not coplanar with the aryl group to which it is attached; at each occurrence, T 4 is, independently, a C2-20Z alkylene group cycloalkylene or cycloalkenylene, or an inertly substituted derivative thereof; at each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl silyl hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or di (hydrocarbyl) amino of up to 50 atoms not counting hydrogen atoms; at each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl sily hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or amino of up to 50 atoms not containing hydrogen atoms, or two R groups together on the same arylene ring or
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/20
6/90 a group R 3 and a group R 21 together on the same arylene ring or on different arylene rings form a bivalent linker group attached to the arylene group in two positions or joined to two different arylene rings; and at each occurrence, R D is independently halogen or a hydrocarbyl or trihydrocarbyl silyl group of up to 20 atoms not counting hydrogen atoms, or 2 R D groups together are a hydrocarbyl, hydrocarbadiyl, diene, or poly (hydrocarbyl) silylene group , especially where the reaction of step (B) occurs by polymerization with grafting.
[0012] In yet another embodiment, the present invention is a method of characterizing an ethylene-based polymer by distribution of the comonomer composition (CDC), being that CDC is calculated from the comonomer distribution profile by CEF, and is defined CDC as a comonomer distribution index divided by a comonomer distribution form factor and multiplying by 100 as shown in Equation 1, Figure 1, and the comonomer distribution index represents the total weight fraction of polymer chains with the content comonomer ranging from 0.5 of the average comonomer content (medium C) , and 1.5 C Average 35.0 to 119.0 ° C, and wherein the comonomer is defined distribution form factor as a ratio of the semi-width of the comonomer distribution profile divided by the standard deviation of the comonomer distribution profile from the maximum temperature (Tp), and the method comprises the following steps: (A) Obtain a weight fraction at each temperature (T) (wT (T)) of 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C with a temperature step increase of 0.200 ° C of CEF according to Equation 2, shown in Figure 2; (B) Calculate the average temperature
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/217
7/90 (T m mean) in a cumulative weight fraction of 0.500, according to Equation 3, shown in Figure 3; (C) Calculate the corresponding average comonomer content in mole% (Cmédio) at the medium temperature (T medium) using the comonomer contents of the calibration curve according to Equation 4, shown in Figure 4; (D) Build a comonomer content calibration curve using a series of reference materials with a known amount of comonomer content, that is, eleven reference materials with narrow comonomer distribution (35.0 CEF monomodal comonomer distribution at 119.0 ° C) with an average molecular weight M w of 35,000 to 115,000 (measured via conventional GPC) in a comonomer content ranging from 0.0 mol% to 7.0 mol% are analyzed with CEF under the same experimental conditions specified in experimental sections of CEF; (E) Calculate comonomer content calibration using the maximum temperature (Tp) of each reference material shown in Formula 4, Figure 4, in which: R2 is the correlation constant; (F) Calculate the comonomer distribution index of the total weight fraction with a comonomer content ranging from 0.5 * Average to 1.5 * C average and if T average is greater than 98.0 ° C, the comonomer distribution index as 0.95; (G) Obtain the maximum peak height of the CEF comonomer distribution profile by searching each data point for the maximum peak from 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C (if the two peaks are identical, then select -the lowest temperature peak); semi-width is defined as the temperature difference between the front temperature and the rear temperature at half the maximum peak height, the front temperature at half the maximum peak is sought forward of 35.0 ° C, while the
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/22
8/90 rear temperature at half the maximum peak is sought behind 119.0 ° C in the case of a well-defined bimodal distribution where the difference in peak temperatures is greater than or equal to 1.1 times the sum of the semi-width of each peak, the semi-width of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is calculated as the arithmetic mean of the semi-width of each peak; (H) Calculate the standard deviation of temperature (Stdev) according to Equation 5, shown in Figure 5.
[0013] In an alternative embodiment, the present invention provides an ethylene-based polymer composition, method for producing it, articles / films / multilayer structures / storage devices prepared with said composition, and method of making such articles, according to any of the previous embodiments, except that the ethylene-based polymer composition has a density in the range of 0.900 to 0.965 g / cm3; for example, from 0.905 to 0.930 g / cm 3 .
[0014] In an alternative embodiment, the present invention provides an ethylene-based polymer composition, method for producing it, articles / films / multilayer structures / storage devices prepared with said composition, and method of making such articles, according to any of the previous embodiments, except that the ethylene-based polymer composition has a melt index (I2) of about 0.1 to 1000 g / 10 minutes; for example, from 0.1 to 5 g / 10 minutes.
[0015] In an alternative embodiment, the present invention provides an ethylene-based polymer composition, method for producing the same, articles / films / multilayer structures / storage devices prepared with
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/23
9/90 said composition, and method of making such articles, according to any of the previous embodiments, except that the ethylene-based polymer composition has I 10 / I 2 less than 20, for example, from 6 to 20.
[0016]
In an alternative embodiment, the present invention provides articles / films / multilayer structures / storage devices prepared with said composition, and method of making such articles, according to any of the previous embodiments, except that the film has a thickness in the strip from 0.5 to 10 millipoles.
Brief description of the drawings [0017] For the purpose of illustrating the invention, a shape that is exemplary is shown in the drawings; however, it is understood that this invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and illustrations shown.
[0018] Figures 1-18 illustrate, respectively, Equations 1-18; Figure 19 is a graphic illustration of CDC calculation obtaining maximum temperature, semi-width and average temperature of CEF showing the comonomer distribution profile of Example 3;
[0019] Figure 20 is a graph illustrating integration limits for unsaturation for Example 3, the dashed line means that the position may be slightly different depending on the sample / catalyst;
[0020] Figure 21 illustrates pulse sequences modified by unsaturation with Bruker 400 MHz AVANCE spectrometer;
[0021] Figure 22 illustrates representations of unsaturation chemical structures;
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10/90 [0022] Figure 23 is a graph illustrating CEF overlays; Figure 24 is a graph illustrating the mass-temperature CEF profile of inventive and comparative examples;
[0023] Figure 25 is a graph showing fading of the film gas at 5 ppm NOx and 60 ° C; and [0024] Figures 26-27 illustrate Equations 26-27, respectively.
Detailed description of the invention [0025] The present invention provides an ethylene-based polymer composition, and the method for producing it. The inventive ethylene-based polymer composition according to the present invention is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than about 45, more preferably greater than 50, most preferably greater than 95, and as high as 400, for example. example, as high as 350, or alternatively, as high as 300, or alternatively, as high as 250, or alternatively, as high as 200, with the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition having less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, for example, less than 110 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 100 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 80 units of unsaturation total / 1,000,000 C., or alternatively, less than 70 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C. The inventive composition has less than 15 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000. 000 C, for example, less than 12 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/25
11/90 alternatively, less than 10 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 8 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 of C, or alternatively, less than 5 units of tri-substituted unsaturation / 1,000,000 C. The ethylene-based polymer compositions can be further characterized by comprising less than 20 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, for example, less than 18 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively less than 15 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively less than 12 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively less than 10 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C Preferably, the inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions comprise up to about 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons, more preferably from about 0.01 to about 3 ra long chain / 1000 carbon mifications. The ethylene-based polymer compositions can have a ZSVR of at least 2 and / or 50. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be further characterized by comprising less than 20 vinylidene unsaturation units / 1,000,000 C , for example, less than 18 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively, less than 15 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, or alternatively, less than 12 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000 .000 C or, alternatively, less than 10 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may have a bimodal molecular weight distribution (MWD) or a
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12/90
Multimodal MWD. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may have a comonomer distribution profile comprising a mono or bimodal distribution in the temperature range of 35 ° C to 120 ° C, excluding purging. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions may comprise a single melting peak by DSC. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can comprise a weight average molecular weight (M w ) of about 17,000 to about 220,000 g / mol, for example, from 60,000 to 220,000 g / mol, from 70,000 to 140,000 g / mol .
[0026] The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions are prepared using a polyvalent ether aryloxy ether metal complex.
[0027] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than about 45, more preferably greater than 50, most preferably greater than 95, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, with the composition having less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C.
[0028] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, the The composition has less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition comprises up to about 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons, more preferably from about 0.01 to about 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons.
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13/90 [0029] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, the composition having less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition having a ZSVR of at least 2, and optionally, the ethylene-based polymer composition invention is characterized by comprising less than 20 vinylidene unsaturation units / 1,000,000 C.
[0030] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, the The composition has less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition has a bimodal molecular weight distribution (MWD).
[0031] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, the The composition has less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition has a multimodal MWD.
[0032] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 11/28
14/90 greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, with the composition having less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition has a single DSC melting peak.
[0033] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, the The composition has less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition has been crosslinked at least partially (at least 5% gel).
[0034] In an embodiment, the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is characterized by a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45, more preferably greater than 50, and as high as 400, preferably as high as 200, with the The composition has less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C, and the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition has a comonomer distribution profile comprising a mono or bimodal distribution in the temperature range of 35 ° C to 120 ° C, excluding purging.
[0035] The present invention further provides a thermoplastic formulation comprising the ethylene-based polymer composition, as described herein, and at least one natural or synthetic polymer.
[0036] The present invention further provides a film comprising the ethylene-based polymer composition, which is characterized by having a b * yellowing change in 10
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15/90 days less than or equal to 3, more preferably less than or equal to 2, and especially less than or equal to 1.
[0037] The present invention further provides a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, one or more polymers; and (2) optionally, one or more layers.
[0038] The present invention further provides a multilayer structure comprising a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, one or more polymers; and (2) optionally, one or more layers.
[0039] The present invention further provides a storage device comprising a film comprising (1) at least one layer comprising a thermoplastic composition comprising (a) the ethylene-based polymer composition and (b) optionally, one or more polymers; and (2) optionally, one or more layers.
[0040] The present invention further provides an article manufactured comprising the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition, as described herein.
[0041] In another embodiment, the invention is a process comprising: (A) polymerizing ethylene and optionally one or more α-olefins in the presence of a first catalyst to form a semicrystalline ethylene-based polymer in a first reactor or a first part of a multipart reactor; and (B) reacting newly supplied ethylene and optionally one or more α-olefins in the presence of a second catalyst comprising a catalyst
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16/90 organometallic thus forming a polymer composition based on ethylene in at least one other reactor or in a posterior part of said multi-part reactor, the catalyst of (A) and (B) being the same or different and each is a metal complex of an aryloxy ether corresponding to the formula:
R 21 -
Q z where M is Ti, Hf or Zr, preferably Zr; at each occurrence Ar 4 is, independently, a substituted C9-20 aryl group, with each occurrence the substituents being independently selected from the group consisting of alkyl groups; cycloalkyl; and aryl derivatives thereof substituted by halogen, trihydrocarbil silyl and halohydrocarbyl, with the proviso that at least one substituent is not coplanar with the aryl group to which it is attached; at each occurrence, T 4 is, independently, a C2-20Z alkylene group cycloalkylene or cycloalkenylene, or an inertly substituted derivative thereof; at each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl silyl hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or di (hydrocarbyl) amino of up to 50 atoms not counting hydrogen atoms; in each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl silyl hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or amino of up to 50 atoms not counting atoms
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17/90 hydrogen, or two R 3 groups together on the same arylene ring or an R 3 group and an R 21 group together on the same arylene ring or on different arylene rings form a divalent linker group attached to the arylene group in two positions or joined to two different arylene rings; and at each occurrence, RD is, independently, halogen or a hydrocarbyl or trihydrocarbyl silyl group of up to 20 atoms not containing hydrogen atoms, or 2 R D groups together are a hydrocarbyl, hydrocarbadiyl, diene, or poly (hydrocarbil) silylene group.
[0042] In yet another embodiment, the present invention is a method to characterize an ethylene-based polymer by distribution of the comonomer composition (CDC), being that CDC is calculated from the comonomer distribution profile by CEF, and is defined CDC as a comonomer distribution index divided by a comonomer distribution form factor multiplying by 100 as shown in Equation 1, Figure 1, and the comonomer distribution index represents the total weight fraction of polymer chains with the content of comonomer ranging from 0.5 of the average comonomer content (medium C) , and 1.5 C Average 35.0 to 119.0 ° C, and wherein the factor is defined comonomer distribution medium as a ratio of semi-width of the comonomer distribution profile divided by the standard deviation of the comonomer distribution profile from the maximum temperature (Tp), and the method comprises the following steps: (A) Obtain a weight fraction at each temperature (T) (wT (T)) of 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C with a temperature step increase of 0.200 ° C of CEF according to Equation 2, shown in Figure 2; (B) Calculate the average temperature
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18/90 (T m mean) in a cumulative weight fraction of 0.500, according to Equation 3, shown in Figure 3; (C) Calculate the corresponding average comonomer content in mole% (medium C) the average temperature (T medium) using the comonomer contents of the calibration curve according to Equation 4, shown in Figure 4; (D) Build a comonomer content calibration curve using a series of reference materials with a known amount of comonomer content, that is, eleven reference materials with narrow comonomer distribution (35.0 CEF monomodal comonomer distribution at 119.0 ° C) with an average molecular weight M w of 35,000 to 115,000 (measured via conventional GPC) in a comonomer content ranging from 0.0 mol% to 7.0 mol% are analyzed with CEF under the same experimental conditions specified in experimental sections of CEF; (E) Calculate comonomer content calibration using the maximum temperature (T p ) of each reference material shown in Formula 4, Figure 4, in which: R 2 is the correlation constant; (F) Calculate the comonomer distribution index of the total weight fraction with a comonomer content ranging from 0.5 * C average to 1.5 * C average and if T average is greater than 98.0 ° C, it is defined the comonomer distribution index as 0.95; (G) Obtain the maximum peak height of the CEF comonomer distribution profile by searching each data point for the maximum peak from 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C (if the two peaks are identical, then select -the lowest temperature peak); semi-width is defined as the temperature difference between the front temperature and the rear temperature at half the maximum peak height, the front temperature at half the maximum peak is sought forward of 35.0 ° C, while the
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19/90 rear temperature at half the maximum peak is sought behind 119.0 ° C in the case of a well-defined bimodal distribution where the difference in peak temperatures is greater than or equal to 1.1 times the sum of the semi-width of each peak, the semi-width of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is calculated as the arithmetic mean of the semi-width of each peak; (H) Calculate the standard deviation of temperature (Stdev) according to Equation 5, shown in Figure 5.
[0043] In some processes, ethylene-based processing aids, such as plasticizers, may be included in the polymer. These auxiliaries include, but are not limited to, phthalates, such as dioctyl phthalate and diisobutyl phthalate, natural oils such as lanolin, and paraffinic, naphthenic and aromatic oils obtained from petroleum refining, and liquid rosin or resin raw materials Petroleum. Exemplary classes of oils useful as processing aids include white mineral oil such as KAYDOL oil (Chemtura Corp., Middlebury, Conn.) And SHELLFLEX 371 naphthenic oil (Shell Lubricants, Houston, Texas). Another suitable oil is TUFFLO oil (Lyondell Lubricants, Houston, Texas).
[0044] In some processes, ethylene-based polymer compositions are treated with one or more stabilizers, for example, antioxidants, such as IRGANOX 1010 and IRGAFOS 168 (Ciba Specialty Chemicals, Glattbrugg, Switzerland). In general, polymers are treated with one or more stabilizers before extrusion or other melting processes. In other incorporation processes, other polymeric additives include, but are not limited to, ultraviolet light absorbers, antistatic agents, pigments, dyes,
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20/90 nucleating agents, fillers, sliding agents, flame retardants, plasticizers, processing aids, lubricants, stabilizers, smoke inhibitors, viscosity controlling agents and non-stick agents. The inventive ethylene-based polymer composition can comprise, for example, less than 10 percent of the combined weight of one or more additives, based on the weight of the ethylene-based polymer composition. A particular advantage of the claimed polymers is the absence of catalyst extinguishing agents, other than water, thus eliminating the need for calcium stearate.
[0045] The inventive ethylene-based polymer composition produced can be further combined. In some embodiments, one or more antioxidants can be combined with the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition and the combined pelletized polymer. The combined ethylene-based polymer composition can contain any amount of one or more antioxidants. For example, the combined inventive ethylene-based polymer composition can comprise from about 200 to about 600 parts of one or more phenolic antioxidants per one million parts of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition. In addition, the combined ethylene-based polymer composition can comprise from about 800 to about 1200 parts of a phosphite-based antioxidant per one million parts of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition. The combined inventive ethylene-based polymer composition can further comprise from about 300 to about 1250 parts of calcium stearate per one million parts of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition.
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21/90
Uses [0046] The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be employed in a variety of conventional thermoplastic fabrication processes to produce useful articles including objects comprising at least one layer of film, such as a single layer film, or at least at least one layer in a multilayer film prepared by casting processes by casting, blowing, calendering, or extrusion; molded articles, such as blow-molded, injection-molded, or rotational molded articles; extrusions; fibers; and woven and non-woven cloths. Thermoplastic compositions comprising the ethylene-based polymer composition include mixtures with other natural or synthetic materials, polymers, additives, reinforcing agents, ignition-resistant additives, antioxidants, stabilizers, colorants, diluents, crosslinkers, blowing agents, and plasticizers.
[0047] The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used in the production of fibers for other applications. Fibers that can be prepared from inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions or mixtures thereof include cut fibers, tow, multi-component fibers, core / film fibers, twisted fibers, and monofilament fibers. Appropriate fiber-forming processes include spunbond and meltblown techniques, disclosed in U.S. Patent Nos. 4,340,563 (Appel, et al.), 4,663,220 (Wisneski, et al.), 4,668,566 (Nohr, et al.), and 4,322,027 (Reba), fibers produced by the “gel spinning process disclosed in US patent No. 4,413,110 (Kavesh, et al.), woven and non-woven fabrics, disclosed in US patent No.
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22/90
3,485,706 (May), or structures made from such fibers, including mixtures with other fibers, such as polyester, nylon or cotton, thermoformed articles, extruded profiles, including extrusions and co-extrusions of profiles, calendered articles, and fibers or yarns stretched, twisted, or curled.
[0048] Additives and adjuvants can be added in the postformation of inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions. Suitable additives include fillers, such as organic or inorganic particles, including clays, talc, titanium dioxide, zeolites, powdered metals, organic or inorganic fibers, including carbon fibers, silicon nitride fibers, mesh or steel wire, and nylon or polyester strands, nanoparticles, etc; tacking agents, thinning oils, including paraffinic or naphthenic oils; and other natural or synthetic polymers, including other polymers that are or can be prepared according to the method of incorporation.
[0049] Mixtures and combinations of inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be performed. Polymers suitable for mixing with inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions include thermoplastic and non-thermoplastic polymers including natural and synthetic polymers. Exemplary polymers for mixing include polypropylene (impact-modified polypropylene, isotactic polypropylene, atactic polypropylene, and random ethylene / propylene copolymers), various types of polyethylene, including free radical and high pressure low density polyethylene (LDPE), low polyethylene linear density Ziegler-Natta (LLDPE), metallocene PE,
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23/90 including multiple reactor PE (mixtures “in a Ziegler-Natta PE reactor and metallocene PE, such as products disclosed in US Patent Nos. 6,545,088 (Kolthammer, et al.), 6,538,070 (Cardwell, et al.), 6,566,446 (Parikh, et al.), 5,844,045 (Kolthammer, et al.), 5,869,575 (Kolthammer, et al.), and 6,448,341 (Kolthammer, et al.)), ethylene / vinyl acetate (EVA) copolymers, ethylene / vinyl alcohol copolymers, polystyrene, impact modified polystyrene, acrylonitrile / butadiene / styrene copolymers (ABS), styrene / butadiene block copolymers and hydrogenated derivatives thereof (styrene / butadiene / styrene (SBS) and ethylene / butadiene / styrene (SEBS)), and thermoplastic polyurethanes. Homogeneous polymers such as olefinic plastomers and elastomers, propylene and ethylene-based copolymers (for example, polymers obtainable under the trade name of plastomers and elastomers VERSIFY ™ (The Dow Chemical Company), SURPASS ™ (Nova Chemicals), and VISTAMAXX ™ ( ExxonMobil Chemical Company)) can also be useful as components in mixtures comprising the ethylene-based polymer.
[0050] The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used as sealing resins. Surprisingly, a certain short chain branch distribution (SCBD), as shown by CDC, in combination with a given MWD, and a certain long chain branch level (LCB) have been shown to improve the performance of hot tack and hot seal , including increased resistance to hot tackiness and heat sealing, lower start temperatures
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24/90 hot tack and hot seal, and an extension of the hot tack window. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used as a pipe and pipe resin through SCDB and MWD optimization, with low levels of unsaturation for improved ESCR (resistance to environmental mechanochemical cracking) and higher PENT (tensile test) Pennsylvania edge / slot). The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used in applications where ultraviolet (UV) stability is desired, weatherability through optimization of SCDB and MWD, in combination with low levels of unsaturation, and low weight levels low molecular, high oligomers incorporated into the comonomer. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used where low levels of undesirable coating, mist, matrix intensification, smoke formation, extractables, flavor, and odor are desired through SCBD and MWD optimization with low molecular weight levels low, high oligomers incorporated into the comonomer. The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions can be used in stretched film applications. Surprisingly, a given SCDB, in combination with a given MWD, and a given level of long chain branching (LCB) shows better stretching ability and resistance to dynamic puncture.
Definitions [0051] When used here, the term composition includes a mixture of materials that comprise the composition, as well as reaction products and decomposition products formed from the materials of the composition.
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25/90 [0052] When used herein, the term mixture or “polymeric mixture” means an intimate physical mixture (i.e., without reaction) of two or more polymers. A mixture may or may not be miscible (not separated into phases at the molecular level). A mixture may or may not be separated into phases. Such a mixture may or may not contain one or more domain configurations, determined by electronic transmission spectroscopy, light scattering, X-ray scattering, and other methods known in the art. The mixture can be affected by physically mixing the two or more polymers at the macroscopic level (for example, melt mix composition or resins) or at the microscopic level (for example, simultaneous formation within the same reactor).
[0053] When used here, the term linear refers to polymers where the polymeric main chain of the polymer is devoid of measurable or demonstrable long chain branches, for example, the polymer is replaced with an average of less than 0.01 branch per 1000 carbons.
[0054] When used here, the term polymer refers to a polymeric compound prepared by polymerizing monomers, whether of the same or different types. Consequently, the term generic polymer encompasses the term homopolymer, usually used to refer to polymers prepared from only one type of monomer, and the term interpolymer as defined below. The term ethylene / α-olefin polymer is indicative of interpolymers as described below. The term interpolymer, when used here, refers to polymers prepared by the polymerization of at least two different types of monomers. The generic term interpolymer includes the term
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26/90 copolymers, usually used to refer to polymers prepared from two different types of monomers, and polymers prepared from more than two different types of monomers.
[0055] The term ethylene-based polymer refers to a polymer that contains more than 50 molar percent of polymerized ethylene monomer (based on the total amount of polymerizable monomers) and optionally can contain at least one comonomer.
[0056] The term ethylene / a-olefin interpolymer refers to an interpolymer that contains more than 50 mole percent of polymerized ethylene monomer (based on the total amount of polymerizable monomers), and at least one α-olefin.
Resin production [0057] All raw materials (ethylene, 1-octene) and the process solvent (a isoparaffinic solvent of high purity and narrow boiling range commercially obtainable under the trade name ISOPAR E from ExxonMobil Corporation) are purified with molecular sieves before introduction into the reaction environment. Hydrogen is supplied in pressurized cylinders with a high degree of purity and is not further purified. The monomer (ethylene) supply stream in the reactor is pressurized via a mechanical compressor to a reaction pressure above approximately 400 to 750 psig. The solvent and comonomer (1octene) supply is pressurized via a positive displacement mechanical pump to a reaction pressure above approximately 400 to 750 psig.
[0058] The individual catalyst components are
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27/90 manually diluted in batches to the specified concentrations of components with purified solvent (ISOPAR E) and pressurized to a pressure that is above the reaction pressure, approximately 400 to 750 psig. All reaction feed streams are measured with mass flowmeters and independently controlled with automatic valve control systems via computer.
[0059] The continuous solution polymerization reactor system according to the present invention consists of two liquid-filled, non-adiabatic, isothermal, circulating and independently controlled rings operating in a series configuration. Each reactor has independent control of all new solvent charges, monomer, comonomer, hydrogen, and component catalyst. The combined supply of monomer, comonomer, and hydrogen solvent for each reactor is temperature controlled independently somewhere between 5 ° C and 50 ° C and typically between 15-40 ° C by passing the supply current through a series of heat exchangers. heat. The new comonomer feed for the polymerization reactors can be manually aligned to add comonomer to one of three choices: the first reactor, the second reactor, or the common solvent and then split proportionally between both reactors for the solvent feed division . The total new feed for each polymerization reactor is injected into the reactor in two locations per reactor with approximately equal volumes of reactor between each injection site. Typically, the new feed is controlled with each injector receiving half the total new feed mass flow. The catalyst components are injected into the polymerization reactor through
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28/90 specially designed goads and each is injected separately at the same relative location in the reactor with no contact time before the reactor. The main catalyst component feed is computer controlled to maintain the reactor monomer concentration at a specified value. The two co-catalyst components are fed based on specific molar ratios calculated for the main catalyst component. Immediately after each new injection site (either feed or catalyst), the feed streams are mixed with the contents of the circulating polymerization reactor with Kenics static mixing elements. The contents of each reactor circulate continuously through heat exchangers responsible for removing excess heat from the reaction and with the temperature of the refrigeration side responsible for maintaining an isothermal reaction environment at the specified temperature. Circulation around each reactor ring is provided by a spiral pump. The effluent from the first polymerization reactor (containing solvent, monomer, comonomer, hydrogen, catalyst components, and molten polymer) leaves the first reactor ring and passes through a control valve (responsible for maintaining the pressure of the first reactor at a value specified) and is injected into the second polymerization reactor of similar design. When the current leaves the reactor it contacts water to stop the reaction. In addition, several additives, such as antioxidants, can be added at this point. The current then passes through another set of Kenics static mixing elements to evenly disperse catalyst additives and extinguishers. [0060] After adding additives, the effluent (containing
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29/90 solvent, monomer, comonomer, hydrogen, catalyst components, and molten polymer) passes through a heat exchanger to raise the current temperature in preparation for separating the polymer from the other minor boiling reaction components. Then, the current enters a two-stage separation and devolatilization system where the solvent polymer, hydrogens and unreacted monomer and comonomer are removed. The recycled stream is purified before re-entering the reactor. The separated and devolatilized molten polymer is pumped through a matrix specially designed for underwater pelletizing, cut into uniform, dried solid pellets, and transferred to a loading funnel. Then, the polymer properties are validated.
[0061] The non-polymeric portions removed in the devolatilization stage pass through several pieces of equipment that separate most of the ethylene that is removed from the system to a ventilated destruction unit (however, it is recycled in manufacturing units). Most of the solvent is recycled back to the reactor after passing through purification beds. This solvent can also have unreacted comonomer that is reinforced with new comonomer before re-entering the reactor. This comonomer reinforcement is an essential part of the product density control method. This recycling solvent may also have some hydrogen which is then reinforced with new hydrogen to achieve the desired polymer molecular weight. A small amount of solvent leaves the system as a co-product due to the carrier solvent in the catalytic streams and a small amount of solvent that is part
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30/90 commercial grade comonomers.
[0062] Inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions (Inventive Examples 1-4):
[0063] The inventive ethylene-based polymer compositions, i.e. Inventive Examples 1-4, are prepared according to the above procedure. The process conditions are reported in Tables 1 and 1A, Tables 2 and 2A. Inventive Examples 1-4 were tested for various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 3-8. Referring to Tables 2 and 2A, ΜΜΆ0 is modified methyl aluminoxane; RIBS-2 is tetrakis (pentafluorphenyl) borate (1) bis (hydrogenated tallow alkyl) amine methyl; and the zirconium-based catalyst is [2,2 '- [1,3-propanediyl bis (oxy-KO] bis [3,5, 5-tris (1,1-dimethyl ethyl) -5'methyl [1, 1 ': 3', l-terphenyl] -2'-olato-κθ]] dimethyl zirconium, (OC-6-33) -zirconium, represented by the following formula:
t-Bu l-Bu
[0064] Inventive Example 4 contains 1000 ppm of polymer processing aid (ΡΡΆ).
[0065] Comparative ethylene-based polymer composition (Comparative Examples 1-4):
[0066] Comparative Example 1 is a 50/50 mixture of a
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31/90 ethylene / 1-hexene copolymer having an I 2 of 1 g / 10 min and density of 0.918 g / cm 3 , which is commercially obtainable from ExxonMobil Chemical Company under the trade name EXCEED ™ 1018, and a copolymer ethylene / 1-hexene having an I 2 of 3.5 g / 10 min and density of 0.912 g / cm 3 , which is commercially obtainable from ExxonMobil Chemical Company under the trade name EXCEED ™ 3512.
[0067] Comparative Example 2 is an ethylene / 1-octene copolymer having an I2 of 1 g / 10 min and density of 0.916 g / cm 3 , which is commercially obtainable from The Dow Chemical Company under the trade name ELITE ™ 5400G .
[0068] Comparative Example 3 is an ethylene / 1-octene copolymer having an I2 of 1.5 g / 10 min and density of 0.914 g / cm 3 , which is commercially obtainable from The Dow Chemical Company under the trade name ELITE ™ 5500.
[0069] Comparative Example 4 is an ethylene / 1-octene copolymer having an I2 of 1.0 g / 10 min and density of 0.920 g / cm 3 , which is commercially obtainable from The Dow Chemical Company under the trade name DOWLEX ™ 2045G.
[0070] Comparative Examples 1-3 have been tested for various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 3-8.
[0071] Comparative Example 4 was tested for various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 17 and 18.
Inventive films 1 and 3 [0072] Ethylene-based polymer compositions inventive in Inventive Examples 1 and 3 are expanded in
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32/90
Inventory films of layers 1 and 3 in an expanded line of films of three layers. The expanded film line consists of three slot feed extruders with single vane spindles (25:30:25 mm). The length / diameter ratio (L / D) for all spindles is 25: 1. The expanded film line has a 60 mm matrix with a double edge air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration. Inventive Films 1 and 3 are produced in a thickness of 1 milliliter. The manufacturing conditions are reported in Table 9. Inventory Films 1 and 3 are tested for their various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Table 10.
Comparative Films 2 and 3 [0073] Comparative ethylene-based polymer compositions of Comparative Examples 2 and 3 are expanded into Comparative Films of layer 2 and 3 in an expanded three-layer film line. The expanded film line consists of three slot feed extruders with single vane spindles (25:30:25 mm). The length / diameter ratio (L / D) for all spindles is 25: 1. The expanded film line has a 60 mm matrix with a double-edged air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration. Comparative Films 2 and 3 are produced in a thickness of 1 milliliter. The manufacturing conditions are reported in Table 9. Comparative Films 2 and 3 are tested for their various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in
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Table 10.
Inventive Film 4 and Comparative Film 2A [0074] The inventive ethylene-based polymer composition of Inventive Example 4 is expanded into a 4-layer Inventive Film in a single-layer expanded film line. Comparative ethylene-based polymer composition of Comparative Example 2 is expanded into Comparative Film 2A. Inventive Film 4 and Comparative Film 2A are produced in a thickness of 2 milliliters. The expanded film line consists of a single 2.5-inch Davis Standard DSBII II barrier spindle. The length / width ratio (L / D) for the spindle is 30: 1. The expanded film line has a 6-inch matrix diameter with a double-edged air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration.
[0075] Inventive Example 4 contains 1000 ppm PPA in the resin. Referring to Comparative Film 2A, 1000 ppm of the polymer processing aid (PPA) is added to the resin before extruding the polymeric material in Comparative Film 2A. PPA is added as 1.25% of a standard PPA mix called CKAC-19 prepared by Ingenia Polymers, which contains 8% DYNAMAR FX-5920A in PE carrier, to give 1000 ppm PPA in the resin.
[0076] The resin manufacturing conditions are reported in Table 9A. Inventive Film 4 and Comparative Film 2A are tested for their various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 10A and 15.
Inventive Mixture 1 and Comparative Mixture 1 [0077] Inventive Mixture 1 is a mixture of 90% of the
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Inventive Example 4 with 10% high pressure low density polyethylene, LDPE 133A from Dow, an LDPE of melting index 0.2 and density 0.921 g / cm 3 .
[0078] Comparative Mixture 1 is a mixture of 90% of Comparative Example 2 and 10% LDPE 133A. In this case, 900 ppm of PPA is also added to Comparative Mixture 1 so that the amount of PPA is the same as that of Inventive Mixture 1. PPA is added as 1.125% of a standard PPA mix called CKAC-19 prepared by Ingenia Polymers, which contains 8% DYNAMAR FX-5920A in PE carrier, to give 900 ppm PPA.
[0079] Inventive Blend 1 and Comparative Blend 1 were expanded into films in a 2-milliliter thick single-layer expanded film line. The expanded film line consists of a single 2.5-inch Davis Standard DSBII II barrier spindle. The length / width ratio (L / D) for the spindle is 30: 1. The expanded film line has a 6-inch matrix diameter with a double-edged air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration.
[0080] The conditions for making the film are given in Table 9A. Inventive Mixture 1 and Comparative Mixture 1 are tested for their various properties according to
with methods of test described below, and these properties are informed in the Tables 10A and 15.Films Inventives of three layers A and B [0081] Referring to to Tables 11A and 11B, fabri cam up Films Inventives of three layers A and B of wake up as Following procedure. At conditions of manufacturing They are
informed in Tables 12 and 13.
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35/90 [0082] The three-layer inventive film A comprises (1) a sealing layer comprising 96.75 weight percent of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition of Inventive Example 3, 1000 ppm by weight of an etching agent slip (erucamide), and 2500 ppm by weight of a nonstick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and nonstick agent; (2) a core layer comprising 72.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, an ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 25 weight percent INSPIRE ™ 114, a propylene-based polymer having a density of approximately 0.900 g / cm 3 and a rate of melt flow (measured at 230 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 0.50 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a glidant (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (non-stick) diatomaceous earth) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent; (3) a coating layer comprising 96.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, an ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a sliding agent (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with remaining weight being LDPE as carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent. The three-layer film B comprises (1) a sealing layer comprising
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36/90
96, 75 percent by weight of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition of Inventive Example 1, 1000 ppm by weight of a slip agent (erucamide), and 2500 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent; (2) a core layer comprising 72.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, an ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 25 weight percent INSPIRE ™ 114, a propylene-based polymer having a density of approximately 0.900 g / cm 3 and a rate of melt flow (measured at 230 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 0.50 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a glidant (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (non-stick) diatomaceous earth) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent; (3) a coating layer comprising 96.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, an ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a sliding agent (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with remaining weight being LDPE as carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent.
[0083] The inventive three-layer coextruded films are manufactured in a three-layer coextruded expanded film line consisting of two extruders
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2.5 inch Egan and 24: 1 L / D (Extruders A and B) and a 2 inch Johnson extruder and 24: 1 L / D (Extruder C). All extruders are of smooth internal diameter with heating and cooling drum (closed ring liquid cooling system). The extruders are driven by DC motors of 60, 75 and 20 HP, respectively. The extruders are controlled by an Extrol 6032 microprocessor. The extrusion process is monitored by pressure transducers, three in the drums 2 before and one after each rupture plate as well as 4 heating zones in each drum, each in the adapter and block and two zones in the matrix. The microprocessor also investigates the extruder rpm, FLC%, HP, Rate, carrier and melting temperature in each extruder. The matrix is a 6-inch Battenfeld-Gloucester with a 15: 75: 15% layer ratio and a 70-milliliter matrix slit. The standard spindles used are New Castle high shear single carrier spindles with a compression ratio of 2.88 in Extruder A; modified double feed spindle dosing with a compression ratio of 3.64 in Extruder B; and Johnson single conveyor with a compression ratio of 2.5 in Extruder C. 2.5 milliliter film coextruded film structure (1.0 milliliter seal / 1.0 milliliter core / 0.5 coating layer milliliter), cut to 21.5, cut plan with core, was produced in 2.5: 1 BUR. The sieve group configuration was 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh.
[0084] Inventive Three-Layer Films A and B are evaluated on an XPDIUS ELITE VFS series
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Weigh Pack Systems, and the results are shown in Table 14. The Weigh Pack VFFS packaging equipment used several seal fasteners: false fasteners + seal fasteners, where the rear seal fastener is concave and the front fastener is convex. The detent plates are V-shaped just above the sealing fasteners. Fixer resistance is adjusted to 180 units, based on the servomotor. The fin seal fastener is set to 50 psi thermal contact pressure.
[0085] Bags are tested using 2 pounds of dry mulatto beans measured as a filler. Pre-measured 2 pound quantities of dry mulatto beans are manually poured into the VFFS bags via the formation ring. The products are evaluated for minimum sealing temperature and minimum thermal contact time, two critical parameters for maximizing VFFS production rate. The minimum sealing temperature is determined by filling the bags of VFFS with a value of 2 pounds of dry grains in a time of constant thermal contact (1.35 s) and decreasing the sealing temperature until the bags of VFFS no longer retain the grains dry. Pillowcases (VFFS bags without any product) are made to determine the minimum time of thermal contact. Testing begins at 5 ° C above the minimum sealing temperature required to retain 2 pounds of dry grains. The sealing bar thermal contact time is then shortened until the VFFS bag no longer retains a seal.
[0086] For determining the minimum sealing temperature, after making the packages, they “stand for approximately 30 seconds and then they are shaken
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39/90 vigorously to make sure that the 2 pound grain content was kept in the bags. To determine the minimum temperature of thermal contact, pillowcases filled with air only are allowed to stand for approximately 30 seconds to allow the seal to be fixed and then, manual pressure is applied to the bags to make sure that they do not burst when opening the seal or have a large leak channel. A leakage channel is a large hole formed at the point where any of the seals at the ends of the overlapping package with long sealing over the long edge of the package. For most solid food applications, airtight sealing, including frozen food, is not required. The results are reported in Table 14.
Comparative three-layer film A [0087] Referring to Table 11C, the Comparative three-layer film A is manufactured according to the following procedure. The manufacturing conditions are given in Tables 12 and 13.
[0088] Three-layer Comparative Film A comprises (1) a sealing layer comprising 96.75 weight percent ELITE ™ 5500G, an ethylene / octene copolymer having a melting index (I 2 ) (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.5 g / 10 min and a density of approximately 0.914 g / cm 3 , 1000 ppm by weight of a glidant (erucamide), and 2500 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent ( diatomaceous earth nonstick) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and nonstick agent; (2) a core layer comprising 72.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, a
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40/90 ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 25 weight percent INSPIRE ™ 114, a propylene based polymer having a density of approximately 0.900 g / cm 3 and a melt flow rate (measured at 230 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 0.50 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a slip agent (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with the remaining weight being LDPE as a carrier for the slip agent and nonstick agent; (3) a coating layer comprising 96.1 weight percent DOWLEX ™ 2045, 11G, an ethylene copolymer (ethylene / octene copolymer) having a density of approximately 0.922 g / cm 3 and a melting index (measured at 190 ° C and 2.16 kg) of approximately 1.0 g / 10 min, 1200 ppm by weight of a sliding agent (erucamide), and 3000 ppm by weight of a non-stick agent (diatomaceous earth nonstick) with remaining weight being LDPE as carrier for the slip agent and non-stick agent.
[0089] Three-layer Comparative Film A is manufactured in a three-layer coextruded expanded film line consisting of two 24-inch 2.5 inch L / D Egan extruders (Extruders A and B) and one Johnson extruder. 2 inches and 24: 1 L / D (Extruder C). All extruders are of smooth internal diameter with heating and cooling drum (closed ring liquid cooling system). The extruders are driven by DC motors of 60, 75 and 20 HP, respectively. Extruders are controlled by an Extrol microprocessor
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41/90
6032. The extrusion process is monitored by pressure transducers, three in the drums of 2 one before and one after each rupture plate as well as 4 heating zones in each drum, each in the adapter and block and two zones in the die. The microprocessor also investigates the extruder rpm, FLC%, HP, Rate, carrier and melting temperature in each extruder. The matrix is a 6-inch Battenfeld-Gloucester with a 15: 75: 15% layer ratio and a 70-milliliter matrix slit. The standard spindles used are New Castle high shear single carrier spindles with a compression ratio of 2.88 in Extruder A; modified double feed spindle dosing with a compression ratio of 3.64 in Extruder B; and Johnson single conveyor with a compression ratio of 2.5 in Extruder C. 2.5 milliliter film coextruded film structure (1.0 milliliter seal / 1.0 milliliter core / 0.5 coating layer milliliter), cut to 21.5, cut plan with core, was produced in 2.5: 1 BUR. The sieve group configuration was 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh.
[0090] The comparative three-layer film A is evaluated on an XPDIUS ELITE VFS series mounting machine from Weigh Pack Systems. The Weigh Pack VFFS packaging equipment used several seal fasteners: false fasteners + seal fasteners, where the rear seal fastener is concave and the front fastener is convex. The detent plates are V-shaped just above the sealing fasteners. Fixer resistance is adjusted to 180 units, based on the servomotor. The fin seal fastener is set to 50 psi thermal contact pressure.
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42/90 [0091] Bags are tested using 2 pounds of dry mulatto beans measured as a filler. Pre-measured 2 pound quantities of dry mulatto beans are manually poured into the VFFS bags via the formation ring. The products are evaluated for minimum sealing temperature and minimum thermal contact time, two critical parameters for maximizing VFFS production rate. The minimum sealing temperature is determined by filling the bags of VFFS with a value of 2 pounds of dry grains in a time of constant thermal contact (1.35 s) and decreasing the sealing temperature until the bags of VFFS no longer retain the grains dry. Pillowcases (VFFS bags without any product) are made to determine the minimum time of thermal contact. Testing begins at 5 ° C above the minimum sealing temperature required to retain 2 pounds of dry grains. The sealing bar thermal contact time is then shortened until the VFFS bag no longer retains a seal.
[0092] For the determination of the minimum sealing temperature, after making the packages, they “stand for approximately 30 seconds and then they are shaken vigorously to make sure that the content of 2 pounds of grain has been kept in the bags. To determine the minimum temperature of thermal contact, pillowcases filled with air only are allowed to stand for approximately 30 seconds to allow the seal to be fixed and then, manual pressure is applied to the bags to make sure that they do not burst when opening the seal or have a large “leak channel. A leakage channel is a large hole formed at the point where any of the seals in the
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43/90 ends of the overlapping packaging with long sealing over the long edge of the packaging. For most solid food applications, airtight sealing, including frozen food, is not required. The results are reported in Table 14.
Inventive Mixtures 2 and 3 [0093] Inventive Mixture 2 is a mixture of 80% of Inventive Example 4 with 20% high pressure low density polyethylene, LDPE 501I from Dow, having an I 2 of 1, 9 g / 10 min and density 0.922 g / cm 3 .
[0094] Inventive Mixture 3 is a 70% mix of Inventive Example 4 with 30% high pressure low density polyethylene, LDPE 501I from Dow, having an I2 of 1.9 g / 10 min and density 0.922 g / cm 3 .
[0095] The Inventive Mixtures 2 and 3 are produced in a line of expanded film of a single layer in thickness of 2 milliliters. The expanded film line consists of a single 2.5-inch Davis Standard DSBII II barrier spindle. The length / width ratio (L / D) for the spindle is 30: 1. The expanded film line has a 6-inch matrix diameter with a double-edged air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration. The conditions for making the film are reported in Table 16. Inventive Mixtures 2 and 3 are tested for their various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 17 and 18.
Comparative Mixtures 2 and 3 [0096] Comparative Mixture 2 is a mixture of 80% of Inventive Example 4 with 20% low density polyethylene
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44/90 high pressure, LDPE 501I from Dow, having an I 2 of 1.9 g / 10 min and density 0.922 g / cm3.
[0097] Comparative Blend 3 is a 70% blend of Inventive Example 4 with 30% high pressure low density polyethylene, LDPE 501I from Dow, having an I 2 of 1.9 g / 10 min and density 0.922 g / cm 3 .
[0098] Comparative Mixtures 2 and 3 are produced in a line of expanded film of a single layer in thickness of 2 milliliters. The expanded film line consists of a single 2.5-inch Davis Standard DSBII II barrier spindle. The length / width ratio (L / D) for the spindle is 30: 1. The expanded film line has a 6-inch matrix diameter with a double-edged air ring system, with a 20: 40: 60: 80: 20 mesh screen group configuration. The conditions for making the film are reported in Table 16. Comparative Mixtures 2 and 3 are tested for their various properties according to the test methods described below, and these properties are reported in Tables 17 and 18.
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Table 1
unity Ex.Inv. 1 Ex.Inv. 1 Ex.Inv. 1 Primary reactor supply temperature ° C 20 20 20 Total solvent flow from primary reactor pound / h 1161 1160 1159 Total ethylene flow from primary reactor pound / h 178 199 220 Total comonomer flow from primary reactor pound / h 76 15 92 Primary reactor supply solvent / ethylene ratio - 6, 9 6, 9 5, 5 New hydrogen flow from secondary reactor cm 3 / min 3383 701 6485 Secondary reactor supply temperature ° C 21 32 20 Secondary reactor total solvent flow pound / h 510 340 400 Secondary reactor total ethylene flow pound / h 196 127 153 Secondary reactor total comonomer flow pound / h 13, 5 1, 8 16, 1 Secondary reactor supply solvent / ethylene ratio - 2.7 2.8 2.7 New hydrogen flow from secondary reactor cm 3 / min 4990 21857 2047 Primary reactor control temperature ° C 140 180 155 Primary reactor pressure p si g 725 725 725 Conversion of ethylene in the primary reactor O % 92 91 81 Percentage of primary reactor solids O % 16 13 16 Primary reactor heat transfer coefficient BTU / h foot 3 ° F 6, 7 9, 1 7, 6 Polymer residence time in the primary reactor H 0.27 0.29 0.25 Secondary reactor control temperature ° C 190 190 190 Secondary reactor pressure p si g 731 730 729 Conversion of ethylene in the secondary reactor O % 87 85 87 Percentage of secondary reactor solids O % 21 17 22 Secondary reactor heat transfer coefficient BTU / h foot 3 ° F 51 44Polymer residence time in the primary reactor H 0.10 0, 12Primary reactor division O % 50 56Reactor production rate pound / h 212 160
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primary Secondary reactor production rate pound / h 215 127 201 Total MB production rate pound / h 426 287 427 Primary reactor catalyst efficiency 10 6 pounds 8, 6 2.3 10, 9 Secondary reactor catalyst efficiency 10 6 pounds 1, 6 1, 1 1, 4
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Table 1A
unity Ex.Inv.4 Primary reactor supply temperature ° C 13, 1 Total solvent flow from primary reactor klibra / h 137.4 Total ethylene flow from primary reactor klibra / h 25 Total comonomer flow from primary reactor klibra / h 9, 3 Primary reactor supply solvent / ethylene ratio - 5, 3 New hydrogen flow from secondary reactor pound / h 6, 7 Secondary reactor supply temperature ° C 10, 8 Secondary reactor total solvent flow klibra / h 54.8 Secondary reactor total ethylene flow kT / h 21, 4 Secondary reactor total comonomer flow klibra / h 1, 7 Secondary reactor supply solvent / ethylene ratio - 2, 6 New hydrogen flow from secondary reactor pound / h 2.2 Primary reactor control temperature ° C 150 Primary reactor pressure p si g 500 Conversion of ethylene in the primary reactor % by weight 85 Percentage of primary reactor solids % by weight 15, 2 Primary reactor heat transfer coefficient BTU / h foot3 ° F AT Polymer residence time in the primary reactor min 11, 6 Secondary reactor control temperature ° C 190 Secondary reactor pressure p si g 500 Conversion of ethylene in the secondary reactor % by weight 87 Percentage of secondary reactor solids % by weight 20, 8 Secondary reactor heat transfer coefficient BTU / h foot3 ° F 41 Polymer residence time in the primary reactor min 7.7 Primary reactor division % by weight 49, 4
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Table 2
unity Ex. Inv.1 Ex. Inv.1 Ex. Inv.1 Catalyst flow in the primary reactor pound / h 1.81 1.962134 1.52 Catalyst concentration in the primary reactor ppm 13, 67 34.95987 13, 67 Catalyst efficiency in the primary reactor 106 pound 8, 56 2.309096 10, 87 Primary reactor catalyst-1 type --- Cat. Based on Zirconium Cat. Based on Zirconium Cat. Based on Zirconium Catalyst-1 flow in the primary reactor pound / h 1.81 1.96 1.52 Primary reactor catalyst-1 Molar weight ~ 91 ~ 91 ~ 91 Primary reactor co-catalyst-1 Molar ratio 1.48 1.42 1.77 Primary reactor cocatalyst-1 type --- MMAO MMAO MMAO Primary reactor cocatalyst-1 flow pound / h 0.81 1, 19 0.81 Concentration of primary reactor cocatalyst-1 ppm 596 1094 596 Primary reactor co-catalyst-2 Molar ratio 6, 91 6, 97 7, 11 Primary reactor cocatalyst-2 type --- RIBS-2 RIBS-2 RIBS-2 Flow of cocatalyst-2 in the primary reactor pound / h 0.52 0.72 0.44 Concentration of primary reactor cocatalyst-2 ppm 99, 6 199 99, 6 Secondary reactor catalyst type --- Cat. Based on Zirconium Cat. Based on Zirconium Cat. Based on Zirconium Catalyst flow in the secondary reactor pound / h 2.30 1.54 3.52 Secondary reactor catalyst concentration ppm 60 76 40 Secondary reactor catalyst efficiency 106 pound 1.56 1, 08 1.43 Co-catalyst-1 of Reason 1.50 1.21 1.48
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secondary reactor molar Type of cocatalyst-1 in the secondary reactor --- MMAO MMAO MMAO Flow of cocatalyst-1 in the secondary reactor pound / h 4.59 1.68 4.62 Secondary reactor co-catalyst-2 Molar ratio 7.02 6, 96 6, 99 Secondary reactor cocatalyst type-2 --- RIBS-2 RIBS-2 RIBS-2 Flow of cocatalyst-2 in the secondary reactor pound / h 2.88 1, 22 2.93 Concentration of cocatalyst-2 in the secondary reactor PPm 100 199 100
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Table 2A
unity Ex. Inv. 4 Catalyst flow in the primary reactor pound / h 5, 8 Catalyst concentration in the primary reactor % cat weight the base of Zr 0.25 Primary reactor catalyst-1 type --- Cat. Based on Zirconium Primary reactor catalyst-1 Molar weight ~ 91 Primary reactor co-catalyst-1 Molar ratio 15, 1 Primary reactor co-catalyst-1 type --- MMAO Primary reactor co-catalyst-1 flow pound / h 4, 6 Co-catalyst concentration-1 primary reactor % weight / A1 0, 12 Primary reactor co-catalyst-2 Molar ratio 1, 2 Primary reactor co-catalyst-2 type --- RIBS-2 Flow of co-catalyst-2 in the primary reactor pound / h 4.0 Co-catalyst concentration-2 primary reactor % weight of cocatalyst-2 0, 5 Secondary reactor catalyst type --- Cat. Based on Zirconium Catalyst flow in the secondary reactor % cat weight the base of Zr 0.25 Secondary reactor co-catalyst-1 Molar ratio 5, 5 Type of co-catalyst-1 in the secondary reactor --- MMAO Flow of co-catalyst-1 in the secondary reactor pound / h 17, 1 Secondary reactor co-catalyst-2 Molar ratio 1, 2 Secondary reactor co-catalyst type-2 --- RIBS-2 Flow of co-catalyst-2 in the secondary reactor pound / h 11, 4 Co-catalyst concentration-2 in the secondary reactor % weight of cocatalyst-2 1, 8
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Table 3
Density (g / cm 3 ) I10 (g / 10 min) I2 (g / 10 min) I10 / I2 Ex. Inv. 1 0.912 11, 5 1.5 7.7 Ex. Inv. 2 0.937 7, 1 0, 4 16, 1 Ex. Inv. 3 0.912 11, 5 1, 6 7.4 Ex. Inv. 4 0.916 8, 0 1, 0 8, 0 Ex. Comp. 1 0.916 9, 1 1, 6 5, 9 Ex. Comp. 2 0.916 8, 5 1, 0 8, 4 Ex. Comp. 3 0.914 11, 2 1.5 7.3
Table 4
Unsaturation unit / 1,000,000 C vinylene tri-substituted vinyl vinylidene Total Ex. Inv. 1 6 2 47 7 62 Ex. Inv. 2 5 1 59 6 71 Ex. Inv. 3 9 2 55 12 78 Ex. Inv. 4 6 4 55 8 73 Ex. Comp. 1 21 46 54 24 145 Ex. Comp. 2 52 51 171 40 314 Ex. Comp. 3 41 32 149 30 252
Table 5
Comonomer distribution index Standard deviation, C Half-width Half-width / standard deviation CDC (comonomer distribution constant) Ex. Inv. 1 0.873 12.301 16,283 1.368 63, 8 Ex. Inv. 2 0.838 6, 250 3, 721 0.595 140, 9 Ex. Inv. 3 0. 802 11,003 5, 788 0.526 152.4 Ex. Inv. 4 0.9298 5, 272 4.958 0.94 98, 9 Ex. Comp. 1 0.662 10,508 25,270 2.405 27.5 Ex. Comp. 2 0.515 18,448 36,739 1.991 25, 9 Ex. Comp. 3 0.246 27,884 42,670 1,530 16, 1
Table 6
Cooling curve data Heating curve data Tc (° C) ÁH ofcrystallization (J / g) Tm (° C) Fusion Ah (J / g) Ex. Inv. 1 95.21 130.7 110.82 132.2 Ex. Inv. 2 112.97 179, 6 123.79 178, 4 Ex. Inv. 3 93, 97 130, 4 108.33 131, 7 Ex. Inv. 4 96, 9 135, 2 110, 6 136 Ex. Comp. 1 103.92 126.7 117.55 129.5 Ex. Comp. 2 105, 1 141, 6 123.63 143 Ex. Comp. 3 106.55 137.5 124 137.4
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Table 7
Identification Test method Mn Mw Mz Mw / Mn ExampleInventive 1 GPCConventional 32,370 86,200 170,500 2.5 ExampleInventive 2 GPCConventional 14,630 103,100 282,600 7.0 ExampleInventive 3 GPCConventional 33,750 84,080 159,600 2.5 ExampleInventive 4 GPCConventional 35,122 94,162 216,572 2.7 Ex.Comparative 1 GPCConventional 36,780 95,950 174,500 2, 6 Ex.Comparative 2 GPCConventional 24,600 101,900 238,200 4, 1 Ex.Comparative 3 GPCConventional 28,800 105,100 374,900 3, 6
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Table 8
G ' (Pan) G (Pan)Phases) Shear rate@ 190 ° C 0, 1 1 10 100 0, 1 1 10 100 0, 1 1 10 100 Ex. Inv. 1 66 1221 12621 85376 620 4 696 27476 102830 6240 4285 3024 1337 Ex. Inv. 2 1764 7855 30375 111000 2756 9716 33986 87314 32724 12494 4558 1412 Ex. Inv. 3 52 1054 11539 84139 569 4411 26910 103850 5716 4535 2928 1337 Ex. Inv. 4 141 1977 17266 109270 913 6295 34450 123590 9240 6598 3853 1654 Ex. Comp. 1 8 270 8214 97443 378 3670 29450 128860 3781 3679 3057 1616 Ex. Comp. 2 199 2134 18203 102500 957 6275 32869 104710 9775 6628 3757 1465 Ex. Comp. 3 34 892 11631 86949 529 4404 27610 104400 5296 4493 2996 1359
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Table 9
Parameter unity FilmInv. 1 Film Comp.2 FilmComp. 3 FilmInv. 3 Actual speed m / min 17.3 22.2 17.4 17.3 Actual rate kg / h 27.6 10, 9 13.2 14.7 Motor load Ampere 6 6 6 6 Spindle speed rpm 50 50 50 50 Pressure Pub 289 306 300 287 Melting temperature ° C 186 N / A (Instrumentation failure) 185 185 Flattened width cm 23.8 23.5 23.8 23.8 Temperature profilePinned Real Pinned Real Pinned Real Pinned Real Core drum 1 ° C 180 180 170 170 180 180 180 180 Core drum 2 ° C 195 196 220 220 195 195 195 194 Core drum 3 ° C 190 189 175 175 190 189 190 189 Core drum 4 ° C 190 189 175 175 190 191 190 191 Adapter temperature ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Pipe ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix temperature 5 ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix temperature 4 ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix temperature 3 ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix temperature 2 ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix temperature 1 ° C 210 210 225 225 210 210 210 210 Matrix slit millipole 2 2 2 2 Freezing line inch 7 7 7 7 BUR2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5
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Table 9A
Parameter FilmInventive 4 FilmComparative 2A MixtureInventive 1 MixtureComparative 1 Expansion ratio (BUR) 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 Output (pound / h) 155.3 155 155 155 Film thickness (mil) 2 2 2 2 Matrix crack (thousand) 70 70 70 70 Horizontal width(inch) 23.5 23.5 23.5 23.5 Air temperature (° F) 45 45 45 46 Temperature profile (° F) Drum 1 374 376 375 375 Drum 2 425 425 426 425 Drum 3 350 349 351 350 Drum 4 350 349 351 350 Drum 5 351 350 351 349 Sieve 441 439 440 440 Adapter 440 441 441 442 Rotor 431 452 433 443 Bottom array 441 441 439 440 Top matrix 439 440 438 440 Melting temperature 453 440 449 442
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Table 10
FilmInventive 1 FilmInventive 3 FilmComparative 2 FilmComparative 3 Brightness 45 ° (%) 76 83 78 91 Fogging - Film (%) 7 5 6 4 Internal fogging (%) 0, 6 0.5 1.3 1.3 Dart A (g) 850 850 850 703 Dart B (g) 580 676 666 - Elmendorf break in normalized MD (g / mil) 334 378 256 376 Elmendorf break in the normalized CD (g / mil) 465 521 535 614 Drilling (ft * lbf / in (3 Λ ) 237 342 399 146 Traction - CD- rupture tension (psi) 6,336 6,811 7,039 6,419 Traction- CD -Energy for rupture(in * lbf) 32 34 33 34 Traction - CD- rupture deformation (psi) 641 670 675 666 Traction - CD- apparent yield strength (psi) 1,419 1,404 1,595 1,477 Traction - MD- breakdown stress (psi) 6,830 7,417 7,320 7,046 Traction - MD - Energy to break (in * lbf) 26 28 24 30 Traction - MD- rupture deformation (psi) 476 506 436 525 Traction - MD- apparent limit of elasticity (psi) 1,713 1,684 1,607 1,654
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Table 10A
FilmInventive 4 FilmComparative 2A MixtureInventive 1 MixtureComparative 1 Average thickness (millipat) 2.04 2.11 2.05 2.1 Dart A (g) 850 850 850 850 Dart B (g) 972 1,080 - 772 Drilling (ft-lbf / in 3 ) 286 320 272 288 Modified perforation (ft-lbf / in 3 ) 68 88 81 80 Type B rupture in the MD (g) 608 625 477 543 Type B rupture in CD (g) 947 1,069 1,171 1,273 Modulus of elasticity 2% MD (psi) 20,791 22,931 21,533 23,836 Modulus of elasticity 2% CD (psi) 21,643 26,071 23,894 26,578 Breakdown voltage in MD (psi) 7,343 6,282 7,165 6,360 Maximum load on the MD (lbf) 15 13 14 13 Deformation at rupture in MD (%) 585 557 575 562 Deformation in MD plastic flow (%) 14 17 16 16 Apparent yield strength MD (psi) 1,393 1,427 1,535 1,495 Breaking stress in DC (psi) 6,355 5,874 5,796 5,662 Maximum load on CD (lbf) 12 12 11 11 CD rupture deformation (%) 630 641 636 643 Deformation in CD plastic flow (%) 13 25 16 14 Apparent limit of elasticity CD (psi) 1,393 1,476 1,451 1,507
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Table 11A. Inventory Three Layer Film A
For sealing layer Ex. Inv. 3 + Slip agent + Non-stick agent 96.75% by weight of Inventive Example 3 2.0% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.25% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1000 ppm Sealing layer slip agent 2500 ppm non-stick sealing layer For coating layer DOWLEX2045.11G +Sliding agent+ Non-stick agent 96.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm coating layer slip agent 3000 ppm non-stick coating layer For bedding DOWLEX 2045.11G + 25% by weight of PP INSPIRE 114 + Sliding agent + Non-stick agent 72.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm Sliding Agent in core 3000 ppm nonstick in core
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Table 11B. Inventory Three-Layer B Film
For sealing layer Ex. Inv. 1 + Slip agent + Non-stick agent 96.75% by weight of Inventive Example 1 2.0% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.25% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1000 ppm Sealing layer slip agent 2500 ppm non-stick sealing layer For coating layer DOWLEX2045.11G +Sliding agent+ Non-stick agent 96.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm coating layer slip agent 3000 ppm non-stick coating layer For bedding DOWLEX 2045.11G + 25% by weight of PP INSPIRE 114 + Sliding agent + Non-stick agent 72.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm Sliding Agent in core 3000 ppm nonstick in core
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Table 11C. Comparative Film of Three Layers A
For sealing layer Ex. Comp. 3 + Sliding agent + Non-stick agent 96.75% by weight ofELITE 5500G 2.0% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.25% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1000 ppm Sealing layer slip agent 2500 ppm non-stick sealing layer For coating layer DOWLEX2045.11G +Sliding agent+ Non-stick agent 96.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm coating layer slip agent 3000 ppm non-stick coating layer For bedding DOWLEX 2045.11G + 25% by weight of PP INSPIRE 114 + Sliding agent + Non-stick agent 72.1% by weight of DOWLEX2045.11G 2.4% by weight of slip agent(the base of LDPE) 1.5% by weight of Non-stick Agent (based onLDPE) 1200 ppm Sliding Agent in core 3000 ppm nonstick in core
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Table 12
Inventive three-layer film A Sealing layer Layer— core Coating layer Parameter unity Actual speed rpm 47.2 48, 1 29, 5 Actual rate lb / h 63, 6 64 32.4 Layer ratio O0 40 40 20 FLC%56, 9 37, 1 15, 3 HP13 7 2 Pressure 1 psi - 1,060 - Pressure 2 psi 2,050 1,230 - Pressure 3 psi 5,780 2,700 - Sieve pressure psi 5,310 - 4,200 Adapter pressure psi 4,170 2,480 3,500 Melting temperature ° F 422 425 414 Flattened width cm 60 60 60 Layer A Layer B Layer C Temperature profilefixed real fixed real fixed real Drum 1 ° F 375 375 375 375 375 377 Drum 2 ° F 425 425 425 425 425 426 Drum3 ° F 380 380 380 383 400 400 Drum 4 ° F 380 377 380 381 400 400 Adapter ° F 400 400 400 400 420 420 Block ° F 450 450 Bottom array ° F 450 450 Top matrix ° F 450 450 Internal matrix 450 450 External air temperature ° C 45 45 Indoor air temperature ° C 45 75 Matrix slit thousand 70 Overall speed rpm 53, 6 Global rate lb / h 160 BUR 2.5
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Table 13
Inventive Film of ThreeLayers B Film Comparative of ThreeLayers A Sealing layer Camadanúcleo Coating layer Sealing layer Camadanúcleo Coating layer Parameter Unit Actual speed rpm 48.2 47.6 29, 1 50, 1 48.5 29, 5 Actual lb / hr 64.4 64.3 32.1 63.5 64.3 32.5 Layer ratio% 40 40 20 40 40 20 FLC% 57.7 36, 5 15.2 58.2 37.3 15, 6 HP 13 7 2 14 7 2 Pressure 1 psi - 1,130 - - 1,080 - Pressure 2 psi 2,570 1,490 - 1,950 1,120 - Pressure 3 psi 5,500 2,720 - 5,750 2,750 - Psi pressure 5,460 - 4,120 5,460 - 4,260 sieve Psi pressure 4,260 2,470 3,450 4,380 2,530 3,540 adapter ° F temperature 426 424 415 425 425 413 Fusion Planed width cm 60 60 60 60 60 60Layer A Layer B Layer C Layer A Layer B Layer C 'S profile fixed real fixed real fixed real fixed real fixed real fixed real temperature Drum 1 ° F 375 376 375 375 375 374 375 376 375 375 375 374 Drum 2 ° F 425 425 425 426 425 425 425 425 425 426 425 425 Drum3 ° F 380 382 380 376 400 400 380 380 380 381 400 400 Drum 4 ° F 380 385 380 383 400 400 380 385 380 381 400 400 ° F Adapter 400 400 400 399 420 420 400 400 400 400 420 421
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Block ° F 450 448 450 447 Bottom array ° F 450 450 450 450 Top matrix ° F 450 450 450 450 Internal matrix 450 450 450 451 External air temperature ° C 45 45 45 45 Indoor air temperature ° C 45 75 45 74 Sealing layer Camadanúcleo Coating layer Sealing layer Camadanúcleo Coating layer Matrix slit thousand70 70Overall speed rpm50.8 53, 6Global rate lb / h161 160BUR 2.5 2.5
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Table 14
Minimum sealing temperature 2 lb weight / thermal contact time 1.35 s Air filled in minimum thermal contact time / Minimum filling temperature Film HTIT (° C) Thermal contact time (s) HTIT (° C) Thermal contact time (s) Comparative three-layer film A Failure Failure 140 2 Inventive three-layer film A 130 1.35 135 1.25 Inventive three-layer film A 135 1.35 135 1.25
Table 15
Comparative Film 2A FilmInventive4 Comparative Mixture 1 MixtureInventive1 Day 0 -1, 47 -0.99 -1, 30 -1, 15 Day 1 -1, 02 -0.84 -0.96 -1, 04 Day 2 -0.60 -0, 64 -0, 54 -0, 97 Day 3 -0, 35 -0, 63 -0, 22 -0.89 Day 4 -0.25 -0.51 0.17 -0.87 Day 7 0.67 -0, 27 1.39 -0, 74 Day 8 0.90 -0, 31 1.73 -0.71 Day 9 1, 30 -0.37 2.08 -0.71 10th day 1.71 -0, 31 2.45 -0, 64Change (Day 10-Day 0) 3, 18 0.68 3.75 0.51
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Table 16
Parameter Ex. Comp.4 Ex.Inv.4 MixtureComp. 2 MixtureInv. 2 MixtureComp. 3 MixtureInv. 3 Expansion ratio(BUR) 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 Output (pound / h) 187.5 188, 1 187.2 188, 9 187, 9 187, 6 Film thickness (mil) 2 2 2 2 2 2 Matrix crack (thousand) 70 70 70 70 70 70 Horizontal width (inch) 23, 5 23, 5 23, 5 23, 5 23, 5 23, 5 Air temperature (° F) 45 45 49 45 46 46 Temperature profile (° F) Drum 1 375 375 375 375 375 375 Drum 2 426 426 425 425 425 425 Drum 3 350 351 350 350 350 350 Drum 4 350 351 340 350 350 350 Drum 5 351 351 340 349 350 350 Sieve 440 441 440 439 440 440 Adapter 439 442 441 440 441 437 Rotor 451 450 431 432 446 442 Bottom array 440 438 440 441 440 440 Top matrix 440 437 440 442 440 440 Melting temperature 452 464 449 454 445 449
Table 17
Name Ex.Comp. 3 Ex.Inv. 4 MixtureComp. 2 MixtureInv. 2 MixtureComp. 3 MixtureInv. 3 I2 1.00 0.87 0.95 0.89 0.93 0.85 I10 7.84 7, 10 8.05 8, 72 8, 36 7.34 I10 / I2 7.82 8, 16 8, 50 9, 81 9, 01 8, 65 Density (g / cm 3 ) 0.9194 0.9161 0.9199 0.9173 0.9213 0.9182
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Table 18
Name Ex.Comp. 3 Ex.Inv. 4 MixtureComp. 2 MixtureInv. 2 MixtureComp. 3 MixtureInv. 3 Fogging (%) 10.5 8.2 5, 6 3, 9 5.3 4.6 External fogging (%) 4.7 3.3 3.4 1.4 3.0 1.5 Brightness 45 ° 64.7 67.5 82.7 82.4 82.2 78.4 Clarity (%) 97.8 98.5 99, 3 98, 9 98, 6 97.3 Dart A (g) 310 AT 280 487 127 289 Dart B (g) NM 948 NM NM NM NM Drilling (ft-lbf / in 3 ) 237 323 224 262 162 230 Elmendorf Break MD (g) 903 665 595 501 427 436 Elmendorf Break CD (g) 1,262 961 1,334 1,067 1,418 1,108 Elmendorf break in normalized MD (g / mil) 445 321 297 247 216 209 Elmendorf break in the normalized CD (g / mil) 609 474 662 522 691 533 Modulus of elasticity 2% MD (psi) 26,002 20,108 27,929 23,024 27,889 23,156 Modulus of elasticity 2% CD (psi) 30,537 22,011 32,372 25,730 32,129 25,890 Breakdown voltage in MD (psi) 5,672 6,990 5,700 6,008 5,427 5,883 Breaking stress in DC (psi) 5,918 6,448 5,721 5,497 5,318 5,483 Deformation at rupture in MD (%) 622 597 654 604 638 621 CD rupture deformation (%) 760 663 806 681 832 721 Deformation in MD plastic flow (%) 14, 1 14.8 15.8 13.2 15.3 14.3 Deformation in CD plastic flow (%) 14.8 15, 1 13, 9 18.3 14.8 16, 7 Apparent yield strength MD (psi) 1,581 1,376 1,664 1,476 1,718 1,538 Apparent limit of elasticity CD (psi) 1,680 1,410 1,726 1,531 1,736 1,559
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Table 19
ZSVR Comparative Example 1 1, 3 Comparative Example 2 3, 1 Comparative Example 3 1, 3 Inventive Example 1 2.4 Inventive Example 2 22, 1 Inventive Example 3 2, 6 Inventive Example 4 3, 4
Testing methods
Density [0100] Samples that are measured for density are prepared according to ASTM D 1928. Density measurements are made within 1 hour of sample pressing using ASTM D 792, Method B.
Melting index [0101] The melting index, or I 2 , is measured according to ASTM D 1238, Condition 190 ° C / 2.16 kg, and is reported in grams eluted for 10 minutes. I10 is measured according to ASTM D 1238, Condition 190 ° C / 10 kg, and reported in grams eluted for 10 minutes.
DSC crystallinity [0102] Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) can be used to measure the crystallization and melting behavior of a polymer over a wide temperature range. For example, to perform this analysis the TA Instruments DSC Q1000, equipped with an RCS (refrigerated cooling system) and an automatic sample collector module, is used. During the test, a flow of nitrogen purge gas of 50 mL / min is used. Each sample is pressed into a film fused at about 175 ° C; The molten sample is then cooled by air to room temperature (~ 25 ° C). A 3-10 mg specimen with a 6 mm diameter of the polymer is extracted
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68/90 cooled, weighed and placed in a light aluminum pan (ca 50 mg), and closed by nailing. Then, the analysis is performed to determine its thermal properties.
[0103] The thermal behavior of the sample is determined by increasing and decreasing the temperature of the sample to create a heat flow against the temperature profile. First, the sample is quickly heated to 180 ° C and this temperature is maintained for 3 minutes in order to remove its thermal history. The sample is then cooled to -40 ° C at a cooling rate of 10 ° C / min and maintained at -40 ° C for 3 minutes. Then, the sample is heated to 150 ° C (this is the “second heat ramp”) at a heating rate of 10 ° C / min. The cooling and second heating curves are recorded. The cooling curve is analyzed by adjusting the extreme baseline points of the start of crystallization to -20 ° C. The heating curve is analyzed by adjusting the extreme points of the baseline of -20 ° C until the end of the fusion. The values determined are: maximum melting temperature (T m ), maximum crystallization temperature (T c ), melting heat (H f ) (in J / g), and the% crystallinity for polyethylene samples using Equation 6 , shown in Figure 6.
[0104] The melting heat (Hf) and the maximum melting temperature are informed of the second heating curve. The maximum crystallization temperature of the cooling curve is determined.
Frequency scanning by dynamic mechanical spectroscopy (DMS) [0105] Fused rheology and frequency scans at constant temperature were performed using an Advanced Rheometric Expansion System (ARES) rheometer.
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69/90 advanced rheometric expansion) equipped with 25 mm parallel plates under nitrogen purge. Frequency sweeps were performed at 190 ° C for all samples in an opening of 2.0 mm and a constant deformation of 10%. The frequency range was 0.1 to 100 radians / second. The voltage response in terms of amplitude and phase was analyzed, from which the storage module (G '), loss module (G) and dynamic melt viscosity (η *) were calculated. Gel Permeation Chromatography (GPC) [0106] The GPC system consists of a 150 ° C Waters high-temperature chromatograph (Milford, MA) (other suitable high-temperature GPC instruments include Model 210 and Model 220 Polymer Laboratories (Shropshire, UK)) equipped with an onboard differential refractometer (IR). Additional detectors may include a PolymerChar IR4 infrared detector (Valencia, Spain), Precision Detectors Model 2040 2-angle laser light detector (Amherst, MA), and Viscotek 150R capillary solution viscometer (Houston, Texas) ). A GPC with the last two independent detectors and at least one of the first detector is sometimes referred to as “GPC-3D, while the term“ GPC alone refers, generally, to conventional GPC. Depending on the sample, the 15 ° or 90 ° angle is used for calculation purposes. Data collection is performed using Viscotek's TriSEC software, version 3, and a solvent degassing device from Polymer Laboratories (Shropshire, UK). Appropriate high temperature GPC columns such as four 30 cm long Shodex HT803 13 micron columns or four 30 cm columns from Polymer Labs filling can be used.
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70/90 various pore sizes of 20 microns (MixA LS, Polymer Labs). The sample carousel compartment is operated at 140 ° C and the column compartment is operated at 150 ° C. The samples are prepared in a concentration of 0.1 g of polymer in 50 ml of solvent. The chromatographic solvent and the sample preparation solvent contain 200 ppm of butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT). Both solvents are sprayed with nitrogen. The polyethylene samples are gently stirred at 160 ° C for four hours. The injection volume is 200 μL. The flow rate through the GPC is fixed at 1 ml / min.
[0107] The GPC column set is calibrated before using the Examples using twenty-one narrow molecular weight polystyrene standards. The molecular weight (MW) of the standards ranges from 580 to 8,400,000 g / mol, and the standards are contained in 6 cocktail mixtures. Each standard mixture has at least a dozen separation between individual molecular weights. The standards were purchased from Polymer Laboratories (Shropshire, UK). Polystyrene standards are prepared with 0.025 g in 50 mL of solvent for molecular weights greater than or equal to 1,000,000 g / mol, and 0.05 g in 50 mL of solvent for molecular weights less than 1,000,000 g / mol. The polystyrene standards are dissolved at 80 ° C with gentle agitation for 30 minutes. Mixtures of narrow patterns are used first, and in descending order from the highest molecular weight component, to minimize degradation. The peak molecular weights of polystyrene standard are converted to molecular weights (M w ) of polyethylene using K and a values (sometimes referred to as α) from Mark
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Houwink mentioned later for polystyrene and polyethylene. See the Examples section for a demonstration of this procedure.
[0108] With GPC-3D it is also possible to obtain absolute weight average molecular weight (M w , A bs ) and intrinsic viscosity regardless of appropriate narrow polyethylene standards using the same conditions mentioned above. These narrow linear polyethylene standards can be obtained from Polymer Laboratories (Shropshire, UK; Parts No. PL2650-0101 and PL2650-0102).
[0109] The systematic approach for determining multi-detector displacement was made in a manner consistent with that published by Balke, Mourey, et al. (Mourey & Balk, Chromatography Polym. Chapter 12, (1992) and Balke, Thitiratsakul, Lew, Cheung, Mourey, Chromatography Polym. Chapter 13, (1992)), optimizing triple detector log results (Mw and intrinsic viscosity) of Dow 1683 wide polystyrene (American Polymer Standards Corp., Mentor, OH) or its equivalents for the narrow standard column calibration results of the narrow polystyrene standards calibration curve. Molecular weight data for determining detector volume displacement are obtained in a manner consistent with that published by Zimm (Zimm, BH, J. Chem. Phys., 16, 1099 (1948)) and Kratochvil (Kratochvil, P., Classical Light Scattering from Polymer Solutions, Elsevier, Oxford, NY (1987)). The total injected concentration used in determining the molecular weight is obtained from the mass detector area and the mass detector constant derivative of an appropriate linear polyethylene homopolymer, or one of the polyethylene standards. The weights
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Calculated molecular 72/90 are obtained using a light scattering constant derivative from one or more of the mentioned polyethylene standards and a refractive index concentration coefficient, dn / dc, of 0.104. Generally, the mass detector response and light scattering constant should be determined from a linear pattern with a molecular weight in excess of about 50,000 Dalton. You can perform the viscometer calibration using the methods described by the manufacturer or, alternatively, using the published values of appropriate linear standards such as Standard Reference Materials (SRM) 1475a, 1482a, 1483, or 1484a. Chromatographic concentrations are presumed to be low enough to eliminate treatment of 2nd virion coefficient effects (concentration effects on molecular weight).
g 'by GPC-3D [0110] The index (g') for the sample polymer is determined by first calibrating the light scattering, viscosity, and concentration detectors described in the gel permeation chromatography method above with polyethylene of homopolymer SRM 1475a (or an equivalent reference). The deviations of the viscosimetric detector and light scattering from the concentration detector are determined as described in the calibration. The baselines are subtracted from the light scattering, viscometer, and concentration chromatograms and integration windows are then defined ensuring that all of the low molecular weight retention volume range is integrated into the light scattering and viscosimetric chromatograms that indicate the presence of detectable polymer
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73/90 from the refractive index chromatogram. A linear homopolymer polyethylene is used to establish a linear Mark-Houwink (MH) reference line by injecting a wide molecular weight polyethylene reference such as the SRM 1475a standard, calculating the data file, and recording the intrinsic viscosity ( IV) and molecular weight (Mw), each derived from light scattering and viscosity detectors, respectively, and the determined concentration of the RI detector mass constant for each chromatographic slide. For sample analysis, the procedure for each chromatographic slide is repeated to obtain a sample Mark-Houwink line. Note that for some samples the lower molecular weights, intrinsic viscosity and molecular weight data may need to be extrapolated such that the measured molecular weight and intrinsic viscosity approach asymptotically a linear homopolymer GPC calibration curve. To this end, many highly branched ethylene-based polymer samples require that the linear reference line be shifted slightly to explain the contribution of short chain branching before proceeding with the calculation of the long chain branching index (g ') .
[0111] A main g (g i ') is calculated for each branched sample chromatographic slide (i) and measuring molecular weight (Mi) according to Equation 7 shown in Figure 7, where the calculation uses the IV linear reference , j in equivalent molecular weight, Mj, in the linear reference sample. In other words, the sample IR slide (i) and the reference IR slide (j) have the same molecular weight (Mi = Mj). For the sake of simplicity, the linear IR reference slides, j are
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74/90 calculated from a fifth order polynomial fit of the reference Mark-Houwink graph. The ratio of IV, or g i ', is obtained only at molecular weights greater than 3,500 due to the signal-to-noise limitations in the light scattering data. The number of branches along the sample polymer (Bn) on each data slide (i) can be determined using Equation 8, shown in Figure 8, assuming an epsilon viscosity protection factor of 0.75.
[0112] Finally, you can determine the average amount of LCBf per 1000 carbons in the polymer on all slides (i) using Equation 9, shown in Figure 9.
GpcBR branching index by GPC-3D [0113] In the 3D GPC configuration, polyethylene and polystyrene standards can be used to measure Mark-Houwink, K and α constants, independently for each of the two types of polymers, polystyrene and polyethylene. These can be used to refine Williams and Ward's equivalent molecular weights of polyethylene in application of the following methods.
[0114] The gpcBR branching index is determined by first calibrating the scattering detectors
light, viscosity and concentration, such like described previously. At baselines are So subt roots of chromatograms in scattering in light, viscosity and concentration. Then they adjust at windows in integration to ensure The integration of all track in volume of
retention of low molecular weights in light scattering and viscometer chromatograms that indicate the presence of detectable polymer in the refractive index chromatogram. Linear polyethylene standards are then used to
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75/90 establish the Mark-Houwink constants of polyethylene and polyethylene as described above. After obtaining the constants, the two values are used to construct two conventional linear reference (cc) calibrations for polyethylene molecular weight and intrinsic polyethylene viscosity as a function of elution volume, as shown in Equations 10 and 11, Figures 10 and 11, respectively.
[0115] The gpcBR branching index is a robust method for characterizing long chain branching. See Yau, Wallace W., Examples of Using 3D-GPC-TREF for Polyolefin Characterization, Macromol. Symp., 2007, 257, 2945. The index avoids the GPC-3D slice-by-slice calculations traditionally used in determining g 'values and branch frequency calculations in favor of detector areas of the whole polymer and point products area. From the GPC-3D data, sample mass M w can be obtained by the light scattering (LS) detector using the peak area method. The method avoids the slice-by-slice ratio of the light scattering detector signal to the concentration detector signal as required in the determination of g '.
[0116] The area calculation in Equation 12, shown in Figure 12, offers more precision because as a global sample area it is much less sensitive to variation caused by detector noise and baseline GPC adjustments and integration limits . Most importantly, the peak area calculation is not affected by the detector volume deviations. Similarly, the intrinsic (IV) viscosity of a high precision sample is obtained by the area method shown in
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Equation 13, shown in Figure 13, where DP i represents the differential pressure signal monitored directly from the viscometer on the line.
[0117] To determine the gpcBR branching index, use the light scattering elution area of the sample polymer to determine the molecular weight of the sample. The sample polymer viscosity detector elution area is used to determine the intrinsic viscosity (IV or [η]) of the sample.
[0118] Initially, the molecular weight and intrinsic viscosity of a linear polyethylene standard sample, such as SRM 1475a or equivalent, are determined using conventional calibrations for both molecular weight and intrinsic viscosity as a function of elution volume, Equations 14 and 15, shown in Figures 14 and 15, respectively.
[0119] Equation 16, shown in Figure 16, is used to determine the gpcBR branching index, where [η] is the measured intrinsic viscosity, [n] cc is the conventional calibration intrinsic viscosity, Mw is the molecular weight measured weight average, and Mw cc is the weight average molecular weight of the conventional calibration. Light scattering Mw (LS) using Equation (5) is commonly referred to as absolute Mw, while Mw, cc from Equation 14, shown in Figure 14, using the conventional GPC molecular weight calibration curve is often referred to as polymer chain Mw. All statistical values with the subscript cc are determined using their respective elution volumes, the corresponding conventional calibration described above, and the concentration (C i ) derived from the response of
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77/90 mass detector. Unsubscribed values are values measured based on the mass detector, LALLS, and viscometer areas. The KPE value is iteratively adjusted until the linear reference sample has a measured gpcBR value of zero. For example, the final values of α and log K for the determination of gpcBR in this particular case are, respectively, 0.725 and -3.355, for polyethylene, and, respectively, 0.722 and -3.993, for polystyrene.
[0120] Once the values of K and α have been determined, the procedure is repeated using branched samples. Branched samples are analyzed using the final Mark-Houwink constants as the best cc calibration values and applying Equations 12-16, shown in Figures 12-16, respectively.
[0121] The interpretation of gpcBR is easy to understand. For linear polymers, gpcBR calculated from Equation 16, shown in Figure 16, will be close to zero since the values measured by LS and viscometry will be close to the conventional calibration standard. For branched polymers, gpcBR will be greater than zero, especially with high LCB levels, because the measured polymer M w will be greater than the calculated M w , cc , and the calculated IV cc will be greater than the measured polymer IV. In fact, the gpcBR value represents the partial IR change due to the effect of molecular size contraction as the result of polymer branching. A gpcBR value of 0.5 or 2.0 would mean an IR molecular size contraction effect at the level of 50% and 200%, respectively, against a linear polymer molecule of equivalent weight.
[0122] For these particular Examples, the advantage of
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78/90 using gpcBR in comparison to the g 'index calculations and branching frequency is due to the higher precision of gpcBR. All parameters used in the determination of gpcBR index are obtained with good precision and are not adversely affected by the low response of 3D GPC detector in high molecular weight give concentration detector. Errors in the calibration of detector volume also do not affect the accuracy of the gpcBR index determination. In other particular cases, other methods for determining Mw moments may be preferable to the aforementioned technique.
CEF Method [0123] Comonomer distribution analysis with elution and crystallization fractionation (CEF) technique (PolymerChar, Spain) (B. Monrabal et al., Macromol. Symp. 257, 71-79 (2007) is performed ). The solvent used is orthodichlorobenzene (ODCB) with butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) antioxidant. The sample is prepared with an automatic feeding system at 160 ° C for 2 hours with agitation at 4 mg / mL (unless otherwise specified). The injection volume is 300 gL. The temperature profile of CEF is: crystallization at 3 ° C / min from 110 ° C to 30 ° C, thermal equilibrium at 30 ° C for 5 minutes, elution at 3 ° C / min from 30 ° C to 140 ° C. The flow rate during crystallization is 0.052 ml / min. The flow rate during elution is 0.50 ml / min. Data is collected at a data point / second.
[0124] The CEF column is packaged by Dow Chemical Company with glass beads at 125 gm ± 6% (MO-SCI Specialty Products) with 1/8 inch stainless steel tubing. The glass beads are washed with acid by MO-SCI Specialty at the request of The Dow Chemical Company. The volume of
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79/90 column is 2.06 mL. Column temperature calibration is performed using a mixture of linear polyethylene 1475a of standard reference material NIST (1.0 mg / ml) and eicosane (2 mg / ml) in ODCB. The temperature is calibrated by adjusting the elution heating rate so that the NIST 1475a linear polyethylene has a maximum temperature of 101.0 ° C, and the eicosane has a maximum temperature of 30.0 ° C. Column resolution of CEF is calculated with a mixture of linear polyethylene 1475a NIST (1.0 mg / ml) and hexacontane (Fluka, purity> 97.0%, 1 mg / ml). NIST hexacontane and linear polyethylene 1475a separation baseline is reached. The hexacontane area (from 35.0 to 67.0 ° C) for the NIST linear polyethylene 1475a area from 67.0 to 110.0 ° C is 50 to 50, the amount of soluble fraction below 35.0 ° C is less than 1.8% by weight. The CEF column resolution is defined in Equation 17, shown in Figure 17, where the column resolution is 6.0.
CDC method [0125] The comonomer distribution constant (CDC) is calculated from the comonomer distribution profile by CEF. CDC is defined as a comonomer distribution index divided by a comonomer distribution form factor multiplying by 100 as shown in Equation 1, Figure 1.
[0126] The comonomer distribution index indicates the total weight fraction of polymeric chains with the comonomer content ranging from 0.5 average comonomer content (Average) and 1.5 Average between 35.0 to 119.0 ° Ç. The comonomer distribution form factor is defined as a ratio of the split comonomer distribution profile half-width
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80/90 by the standard deviation of the comonomer distribution profile of the maximum temperature (T p ).
[0127] CDC is calculated from the comonomer distribution profile by CEF, and CDC is defined as the comonomer distribution index divided by the comonomer distribution form factor multiplying by 100 as shown in Equation 1, Figure 1 , and the comonomer distribution index indicates the total weight fraction of polymeric chains with the comonomer content ranging from 0.5 average comonomer content ( average C) and 1.5 average C from 35.0 to 119 , 0 ° C, and the comonomer distribution form factor is defined as a ratio of the comonomer distribution profile half-width divided by the standard deviation of the comonomer distribution profile from the maximum temperature (Tp).
[0128] CDC is calculated according to the following steps:
(A) Obtain a weight fraction at each temperature (T) (wT (T)) of 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C with a temperature step increase of 0.200 ° C of CEF according to Equation 2 , shown in Figure (2); (B) Calculate the average temperature (Average) in a cumulative weight fraction of 0.500, according to Equation 3, shown in Figure 3; (C) Calculate the corresponding average comonomer content in molar% (Average) at the average temperature (Average) using the comonomer content calibration curve according to Equation 4, shown in Figure 4; (D) Construct a comonomer content calibration curve using a series of reference materials with a known amount of comonomer content, that is, eleven reference materials with narrow comonomer distribution (35.0 CEF monomodal comonomer distribution
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81/90 to 119.0 ° C) with an average molecular weight (M w ) of 35,000 to 115,000 (measured via conventional GPC) in a comonomer content ranging from 0.0 mol% to 7.0 mol% are analyzed with CEF under the same experimental conditions specified in the CEF experimental sections; (E) Calculate the comonomer content calibration using the maximum temperature (Tp) of each reference material and its respective comonomer content; the calibration is calculated from each reference material as shown in Equation 4, shown in Figure 4, in which: R2 is the correlation constant; (F) Calculate the comonomer distribution index from the total weight fraction with a comonomer content ranging from 0.5 * C average to 1.5 * C average , and if T is greater than 98.0 ° C, define the comonomer distribution index will be 0.95; (G) Obtain the maximum peak height of the CEF comonomer distribution profile by searching each data point for the highest peak from 35.0 ° C to 119.0 ° C (if the two peaks are identical, then select- the lowest temperature peak); semi-width is defined as the temperature difference between the front temperature and the rear temperature at half the maximum peak sought ahead of 35.0 ° C, while the rear temperature at half the maximum peak is sought behind 119.0 ° C , in the case of a well-defined bimodal distribution where the difference in peak temperatures is greater than or equal to 1.1 times the sum of semi-width of each peak, and the semi-width of the inventive ethylene-based polymer composition is calculated as the average arithmetic of the semi-width of each peak; (H) Calculate the standard deviation of temperature (Stdev) according to Equation 5, shown in Figure 5.
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Determination of M w-gpc by conventional GPC [0129] To obtain M w-gpc values, the chromatographic system consists of a Model PL-210 from Polymer Laboratories or a Model PL-220 from Polymer Laboratories equipped with a detector of refractive index (IR) concentration. The column and carousel compartments are operated at 140 ° C. Three 10 pm Mixed-B columns from Polymer Laboratories are used with a 1,2,4trichlorobenzene solvent. The samples are prepared in a concentration of 0.1 g of polymer in 50 ml of solvent. The solvent used to prepare the samples contains 200 ppm of the antioxidant butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT). The samples are prepared by gently shaking them at 160 ° C for 4 hours. The injection volume used is 100 μL and the flow rate is 1 mL / min. Calibration of the GPC column set is performed with twenty-one narrow molecular weight polystyrene standards acquired from Polymer Laboratories. The maximum molecular weights of polystyrene standards are converted to molecular weights of polyethylene as shown in Equation 26 shown in Figure 26, where M is the molecular weight, A has a value of 0.4316 and B is equal to 1.0.
[0130] A third order polynomial is determined to construct the logarithmic molecular weight calibration as a function of elution volume. The weight average molecular weight is defined by the conventional calibration above as Mwcc in Equation 27 shown in Figure 27. Where, the sum is across the GPC elution curve, with Ri and M representing the RI and molecular weight detector signal conventional calibration on each GPC elution slide (slice). Calculations of equivalent molecular weight of polyethylene are performed using
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83/90 the Viscotek TriSEC software, version 3.0. The accuracy of AM w of average molecular weight is excellent at <2.6%.
Method of measuring zero creep shear viscosity (slow deformation under constant stresses, at determined temperatures):
[0131] Zero shear viscosities are obtained via creep tests that were performed on an AR-G2 controlled tension rheometer (TA Instruments, New Castle, Del) using parallel plates 25 mm in diameter at 190 ° C. Adjust the rheometer oven to the test temperature for at least 30 minutes before setting the constants to zero. At the test temperature, a compression disk molded between the plates is inserted and allowed to stand in equilibrium for 5 minutes. The top plate is then lowered to 50 pm above the desired test opening (1.5 mm). Any superfluous material is trimmed and the upper plate is lowered to the desired opening. Measurements are performed under nitrogen purge at a flow rate of 5 L / min. The creep time is set to 2 hours.
[0132] A constant low shear stress of 20 Pa is applied to all samples to ensure that the steady state shear rate is low enough to be in the Newtonian region. The resulting steady-state shear rates are in the range of 10 -3 to 10 -4 s -1 for the samples in this study. Steady state is determined using linear regression for all data in the last 10% time window of the log (J (t)) versus log (t) graph, where J (t) fluency observance and t is the fluency. If the
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84/90 slope of the linear regression is greater than 0.97, the steady state will be considered as reached, and then the fluency test will be interrupted. In this study, in all cases the slope meets the criteria within 2 hours. The steady-state shear rate is determined from the slope of the linear regression of all data points in the last 10% time window of the graph of ε versus t, where ε is deformation. The zero shear viscosity is determined from the applied stress ratio to the steady-state shear rate.
[0133] In order to determine if the sample is degraded during the creep test, a small amplitude oscillatory shear test is performed before and after the creep test on the same specimen from 0.1 to 100 rad / s . The complex viscosity values of the two tests are compared. If the difference in viscosity values at 0.1 rad / s is greater than 5%, sample degradation will be considered during the creep test, and the result will be discarded.
[0134] Zero shear viscosity ratio (ZSVR) is defined as the ratio of the zero shear viscosity (ZSV) of the branched polyethylene material to the ZSV of the linear polyethylene material in the equivalent average weight molecular weight (Mw-gpc) shown in Equation 18 shown in Figure 18.
[0135] The ZSV value of the fluency test at 190 ° C is obtained via the method described above. The value of Mw-gpc is determined from at least conventional GPC as described above. The correlation between linear polyethylene ZSV and its MW-gpc was established based on a series of linear polyethylene reference materials. A description of the relationship
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ZSV / Mw can be found in the ANTEC minutes: Karjala, Teresa P .; Sammler, Robert L .; Mangnus, Marc A .; Hazlitt, Lonnie G .; Jonhson, Mark S .; Hagen, Charles M., Jr .; Huang, Joe WL; Reichek, Kennteh N., “Detection of low levels of long-chain branching in polyolefins (“ Detection of low levels of long chain branching in polyolefins). Annual Technical Conference - Society of Plastics Engineers (2008), 66 to 887-891.
1 H NMR method [0136] 3.26 g of stock solution is added in 0.133 g of polyolefin sample in 10 mm NMR tube. The stock solution was a mixture of tetrachloroethane-d2 (TCE) and perchlorethylene (50:50, w: w) with 0.001M Cr 3+ . Purge the solution in the tube with N2 for 5 minutes to reduce the amount of oxygen. The capped sample tube is left at room temperature overnight to swell the polymer sample. The sample is dissolved at 110 ° C with stirring. The samples are free of additives that can contribute to unsaturation, for example, glidants such as erucamide.
[0137] The 1 H NMR is operated with a 10 mm cryogenic probe at 120 ° C on a 400 MHz AVANCE spectrometer from Bruker.
[0138] Two experiments are carried out to obtain unsaturation: the control experiment and the double pre-saturation experiment.
[0139] For the control experiment, the data are processed with an exponential window function with LB = 1Hz, the baseline has been corrected from 7 to -2 ppm. The first residual signal H of TCE is set to 100, using the I-integral total of 0.5 to 3 ppm of the whole sign polymer in experiment
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86/90 control. The number of CH 2 , NCH 2 groups in the polymer is calculated as follows:
NCH2 = Itotal / 2 [0140] For the double pre-saturation experiment, the data are processed with an exponential window function with LB = 1Hz, the baseline has been corrected from 6.6 to 4.5 ppm. The 1 H residual TCE signal is fixed at 100, the corresponding integrals for unsaturation (Ivinylene, Itrisubstituted,
Iviniia, and I vinylidene ) were integrated based on the region shown in Figure 20. The number of unsaturation units for vinylene, tri-substituted, vinyl and vinylidene is calculated:
N vinylene I vinylene / 2 N tri-substituted I tri-substituted
Nvinyl = Ivinyl / 2 N vinylidene I vinylidene / 2 [0141] Calculate unsaturation units / 1,000,000 carbons as follows:
Nvinylene / 1,000,000 C = (Nvinylene / NCH2) * 1,000,000
Nsubstituted / 1,000,000 C = (Nsubstituted / NCH2) * 1,000,000
Nvinyl / 1,000,000 C = (Nvinyl / NCH2) * 1,000,000 N vinylidene / 1,000,000 C = (Nvinylidene / NCH2) * 1,000,000 [0142] The requirement for unsaturation NMR analysis includes: level of unsaturation quantification is 0.47 ± 0.02 / 1,000,000 carbons for Vd2 with 200 scans (less than 1 hour data acquisition including time to run the control experiment) with 3, 9% sample weight (for structure Vd2, see Macromolecules, vol. 38, 6988, 2005).
10 mm high temperature cryogenic probe. The level of quantification is defined as the signal-to-noise ratio of 10.
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87/90 [0143] The chemical transition (resonant frequency of a nucleus in relation to a standard) is adjusted to 6.0 ppm for the 1 H residual TCT-d2 signal. ZG pulse control is performed, TD 32768, NS 4, DS 12, SWH 10,000 Hz, AQ 1.64 s, D1 14 s. The double presaturation experiment is performed with a modified pulse sequence, O1P 1.354ppm, O2P 0.960 ppm, PL9 57 db, PL21 70 db, TD 32768, NS 200, DS 4, SWH 10,000 Hz, AQ 1.64 s, D1 1 s, D13 13 s. Figure 21 shows the pulse sequences modified for unsaturation with Bruker's AVANCE 400 MHz spectrometer.
Gel content [0144] The gel content is determined according to Method A of ASTM D2765-01 in xylene. The sample is cut to the required size using a knife.
[0145] The following physical properties are measured in the films produced:
• Total (global), surface and internal fogging: The samples measured for internal fogging and global fogging are obtained and prepared according to ASTM D 1003. Internal fogging was obtained via a combination of refractive index using mineral oil on both sides of the films. Surface fogging is determined as the difference between global fogging and internal fogging.
• 45 ° brightness: ASTM D-2457.
• Elmendorf break strength in MD and CD: ASTM D1922.
• Tensile strength in MD and CD: ASTM D-882.
• Dart impact resistance: ASTM D-1709.
[0146] Drilling and modified drilling • Drilling: Drilling is measured on a Model 4201 of
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Instron with Testworks software from Sintech version 3.10. The specimen measures 6 inches x 6 inches and 4 measurements are taken to determine an average drilling value. The film is packaged for 40 hours after film production and at least 24 hours in an ASTM controlled laboratory. A 100 pound load cell is used with a 12.56 inch 2 round specimen clamp. The drill rig is a polished stainless steel ball ¼ inch in diameter (on a 0.25 inch rod) with a maximum travel length of 7.5 inches. There is no gap length; the probe is as close as possible to the specimen, but without touching it. The plunger speed used is 10 inches / minute. The thickness of the film, the distance traveled by the plunger, and the maximum load are used to determine the perforation by the software. The drill rig is cleaned using a “KIM tissue paper after each specimen.
• Modified drilling: Identical to drilling resistance except that the drilling rig is a polished stainless steel cylinder 0.5 inch in diameter supported on a 0.5 inch rod.
Gaseous nitrous oxide accelerated fading test method [0147] The gas fading test is the America Association Textile Chemist and Colorists (AATCC) 23-1994 test method, and it assesses the body color change evidence when exposed to atmospheric nitrogen oxides derived from the combustion of heating gas. The sample chamber allows samples to be exposed to an air atmosphere that has passed over and contains the combustion by-products of a
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89/90 gas burner, in this case natural gas. The atmosphere inside the oven contains ~ 5 ppm of nitrogen oxides, measured using Draeger tubes. The test is used to simulate storage at high temperatures in a warehouse with exposure to deplete heater systems or gas forklifts producing nitrogen oxides.
[0148] The film samples are placed in the gas fading oven at 60 ° C. Every 24 hours, the degree of color change of the polymer is measured by noting the CIE L * a * b values according to the ASTM E 313 method, using a CM-2600d spectrophotometer from Minolta. The Commission Internationale de L'éclairage (CIE) is the international authority on light, color lighting, and color spaces and today has its headquarters in Vienna, Austria. In particular, the change in the b * value gives the change in the direction of yellow (positive change from b *) or blue (negative change from b *) when compared to an unexposed sample. The test is completed after 10 days of exposure.
[0149] Unless stated differently, implicit in context or conventional in the technique, all parts and percentages are based on weight.
[0150] All patent applications, publications, patents, testing procedures, and other cited documents, including priority documents, are hereby fully incorporated by reference to the extent that such disclosure is not inconsistent with the disclosed compositions and methods and for all jurisdictions in which such incorporation is permitted.
[0151] The film properties are shown in the following table. Example 6 shows advantages in properties
Petition 870190092075, of 16/09/2019, p. 104/117
90/90 relative to traction when compared to CE2 of rupture stress in MD, maximum load, and deformation at rupture and rupture stress in CD. The other properties shown in the following table for Ex. 6 are acceptable / good for use in heavy carry bags (HDSS) and other film applications. For mixtures with 10% LDPE 133A, the perforation is very similar between Ex. 6 + 10% LDPE 133A and CE2 + 10% LDPE 133A and there are advantages to Ex. 6 + 10% LDPE 133A when compared with CE2 + 10% LDPE 133A improved tensile strength in MD, maximum load in MD, strain at break in MD, yield strength in MD, tensile strength in CD, and elastic strain in CD.
[0152] Figure 25 shows a main advantage of this invention. In Figure 25, films are tested by the accelerated fading test method for gaseous nitrous oxide (Nox). Comparative Film 2A tended to yellow significantly after one day as seen in the increase in the b * axis. A CIE b * change of 1.5 units or less is considered acceptable under these test conditions after 10 days. Inventive Film 4 satisfies this requirement shown with a change of 0.68 when compared with that of Comparative Film 2A of 3.18. Additionally, for mixtures with LDPE, Inventive Mixture 1 had a change of b * during 10 days of 0.51, satisfying the desired requirement, and Comparative Mixture 1 did not satisfy this requirement with a value of 3.75.
权利要求:
Claims (18)
[1]
1. Composition of polymer based on ethylene, characterized by the fact of having:
(i) a bimodal or multimodal molecular weight distribution;
(ii) a comonomer distribution constant greater than 45 to as high as 400;
(iii) less than 120 units of total unsaturation / 1,000,000 C;
(iv) single DSC melting peak; and (v) a density of 0.900 g / cm3 to 0.965 g / cm3.
[2]
2. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it comprises up to 3 long chain branches / 1000 carbons.
[3]
3. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it has a zero shear viscosity ratio (ZSVR) of at least 2.
[4]
4. Polymer composition according to claim 3, characterized by the fact that it comprises less than 20 units of vinylidene unsaturation / 1,000,000 C.
[5]
5. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it has a bimodal molecular weight distribution.
[6]
6. Polymer composition, according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it has a multimodal molecular weight distribution.
[7]
7. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized in that it has been cross-linked at least partially (at least 5% by weight of gel).
[8]
Polymer composition according to claim 1,
Petition 870200008177, of 17/01/2020, p. 6/10
2/5 characterized by the fact that it has a comonomer distribution profile comprising a mono or bimodal distribution from 35 ° C to 120 ° C, excluding purging.
[9]
9. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it has an Mw of 17,000 to 220,000 g / mol.
[10]
10. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized in that a film comprising the composition has a yellowing change b *, within 10 days, less than or equal to 3, according to test method 23-1994 of the America Association Textile Chemist and Colorists (AATCC).
[11]
11. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized in that a film comprising the composition has a yellowing change b *, within 10 days, less than or equal to 2, according to test method 23-1994 of the America Association Textile Chemist and Colorists (AATCC).
[12]
12. Polymer composition according to claim 1, characterized in that a film comprising the composition has a yellowing change b *, within 10 days, less than or equal to 1, according to test method 23-1994 of the America Association Textile Chemist and Colorists (AATCC).
[13]
13. Manufactured article, characterized by the fact that it comprises the composition, as defined by claim 1.
[14]
14. Manufactured article according to claim 13, characterized in that it is in the form of at least one layer of film.
[15]
15. Thermoplastic formulation, characterized by the fact that it comprises the polymer composition, as defined by claim 1, and at least one natural or synthetic polymer.
Petition 870200008177, of 17/01/2020, p. 7/10
3/5
[16]
16. Formulation according to claim 15, characterized in that a film comprising the formulation has a yellowing change b *, in 10 days, less than or equal to 3, according to America's test method 23-1994 Association Textile Chemist and Colorists (AATCC).
[17]
17. Formulation according to claim 16, characterized in that the ethylene-based composition comprises 60 to 95 weight percent of the formulation.
[18]
18. Polymerization process, using the ethylene-based polymer composition as defined in claim 1, characterized by the fact that it comprises:
(A) polymerize ethylene and optionally one or more aolefins in the presence of a first catalyst to form a semicrystalline ethylene-based polymer in a first reactor or a first part of a multi-part reactor; and (B) reacting newly supplied ethylene and optionally one or more α-olefins in the presence of a second catalyst comprising an organometallic catalyst thus forming an ethylene-based polymer composition in at least one other reactor or in a later part of said reactor. multiple parts, the catalyst of (A) and (B) can be the same or different and each is a metal complex of a polyvalent ether aryloxy corresponding to the formula:
Petition 870200008177, of 17/01/2020, p. 8/10
4/5

where M 3 is Ti, or Hf;
at each occurrence Ar 4 is, independently, a substituted C9-20 aryl group, with each occurrence the substituents being independently selected from the group consisting of alkyl groups; cycloalkyl; and aryl derivatives thereof substituted by halogen, trihydrocarbil silyl and halohydrocarbyl, with the proviso that at least one substituent is not coplanar with the aryl group to which it is attached;
at each occurrence, T 4 is, independently, a C2-20Z alkylene group cycloalkylene or cycloalkenylene, or an inertly substituted derivative thereof;
at each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl sily hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or di (hydrocarbyl) amino of up to 50 atoms not counting hydrogen atoms;
at each occurrence R and, independently, hydrogen, halogen, hydrocarbyl group, trihydrocarbyl silyl, trihydrocarbyl sily hydrocarbyl, alkoxy or amino of up to 50 atoms not containing hydrogen atoms, or two R groups together on the same arylene ring or one R group and one group R together on the same arylene ring or on different arylene rings
Petition 870200008177, of 17/01/2020, p. 9/10
5/5 form a divalent linker group attached to the arylene group in two positions or joined to two different arylene rings; and at each occurrence, RD is, independently, halogen or a hydrocarbyl or trihydrocarbyl silyl group of up to 20 atoms not containing hydrogen atoms, or 2 R D groups together are a hydrocarbyl, hydrocarbadiyl, diene, or poly (hydrocarbil) silylene group.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
US8829115B2|2014-09-09|
CN103038281A|2013-04-10|
WO2011109563A2|2011-09-09|
BR112012022194A2|2016-07-05|
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WO2011109563A3|2011-11-10|
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EP2542621B1|2020-09-30|
RU2012141894A|2014-04-10|
KR20130004585A|2013-01-11|
JP2013521382A|2013-06-10|
US20130046061A1|2013-02-21|
EP2542621A2|2013-01-09|
JP5858935B2|2016-02-10|
MY180069A|2020-11-20|
CN103038281B|2015-11-25|
MX2012010126A|2013-02-26|
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法律状态:
2018-04-10| B06F| Objections, documents and/or translations needed after an examination request according [chapter 6.6 patent gazette]|
2019-07-16| B06T| Formal requirements before examination [chapter 6.20 patent gazette]|
2019-10-22| B06A| Patent application procedure suspended [chapter 6.1 patent gazette]|
2020-02-18| B09A| Decision: intention to grant [chapter 9.1 patent gazette]|
2020-04-14| B16A| Patent or certificate of addition of invention granted [chapter 16.1 patent gazette]|Free format text: PRAZO DE VALIDADE: 20 (VINTE) ANOS CONTADOS A PARTIR DE 02/03/2011, OBSERVADAS AS CONDICOES LEGAIS. |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
US71600410A| true| 2010-03-02|2010-03-02|
PCT/US2011/026929|WO2011109563A2|2010-03-02|2011-03-02|Ethylene-based polymer compositions|
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