CA1316619C - Resinous composition for powder coating - Google Patents

Resinous composition for powder coating

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Publication number
CA1316619C
CA1316619C CA000575311A CA575311A CA1316619C CA 1316619 C CA1316619 C CA 1316619C CA 000575311 A CA000575311 A CA 000575311A CA 575311 A CA575311 A CA 575311A CA 1316619 C CA1316619 C CA 1316619C
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Canada
Prior art keywords
weight
vinyl
composition according
propylene
parts
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA000575311A
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French (fr)
Inventor
Kentaro Mashita
Tadayuki Ohmae
Kizuku Wakatsuki
Toshio Kawakita
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Sumitomo Chemical Co Ltd
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Sumitomo Chemical Co Ltd
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Abstract

ABSTRACT

RESINOUS COMPOSITION FOR POWDER COATING
A resinous composition suitable for powder coating on metals on which a heat resistant coating layer is formed contains (A) modified polypropylene in which unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride is grafted on crystalline propylene/.alpha.-olefin copolymer, (B) ethylene polymer, (C) metal oxide or hydroxide and (D) polymers of C6 or more vinyl cycloalkane and the composition contains 0.001 - 1.0 %
by weight of the vinyl cycloalkane unit.

Description

- 1- 131~619 RESINOUS COMPOSITION FOR POWDER COATING

The present invention relates to a resinous composition for powder coating, more particularly a resinous composition which is excellent in adhesion with a metal and is able to form a coating layer which is superior in heat resistance and extensibility, compounding a given amount each of (A) modified polypropylene, tB~ ethylene polymer, (C) metal oxide or hydroxide and (D) polymers of vinyl cycloalkane having at least six carbon atoms.

Powder coating on the basis of such olefin polymer as ethylene polymer and propylene polymer has been widely used to provide corrosion resistance, chemical resistance! durability, staining resistance and so on to metal articles. Difficulty encountered in this sort of coating is that the coating is inferior in adhesion with metals since olefin polymer is non-polar. Modification of olefin pol~mer, e.g., grafting or copolymerizing monomers having polar groups on or with the olefin polymer is proposed in order to solve the difficulty above (Japanese patent Kokai Nos. 48-103645, 54-155242, 55-118975 59-36841 and others). However, these improvements in adhesion with metals are not satisfactory yet even after such modification is made.

Furthermore, ethylene polymer hardly provides enough heat resistance when coating is made on pipes for supplying hot water environmental parts of engines of automobiles and so on which are subjected to high temperature.
Propylene polymer is not tolerable with respect to rust prevention or protection, since elongation of coated layer is so small that the layer is ready to be cracked . . .
- 2 - 1 31 6 61 ~

when deformation working of a metal base is made or impact is applied to, although the polymer is superior in heat resistance.

According to the present invention, a resinous composition suitable for powder coating is provided which comprises (~1 80 - 95 parts by weight of polypropylene modified by grafting unsaturated carboxylic acid anhydride thereof on at least a part of crystalline random copolymer of (a) 90 - 99 ~ ~y weight of propylene and (b) 10 - 1 % by weight of ~-olefin having 2 - 10 carbon atoms excluding propylene, (B)20 - 5 parts by weight of ethylene polymer, (C~ 0.1 - 10 parts by weight of metal oxide or hydroxide, and (D~ a sufficient amount of vinyl cycloalkane polymer to ha~e 0.001 - 1.0 % by weight of vinyl cycloalkane unit contained in the composition, said cycloalkane having at least six carbon atoms.

The present composition is so ready to be pul~erized mechanically that a period of time to this effect is short and energy required is small. Coated layer produced by fluidized dipping or electrostatic coating has the following features:
1. good at adhesion with a metal, 2. superior in heat resistance, 3. high elongation and excellent in bending, 4. high surface hardness and hardiy scratched and 5. good at melt flowability, so that surface is smooth.

Examples of shaped articles to which the present coating is applied are 1, kitchen appliances such as hot water supplying pipes and a drainboard, 2. parts for automobiles such as an electro magnetic shield, ~ 3 ~ 131~619 3. household appIiances` such as a dishwasher and a basket in a washing machine and 4. others such as gardening tools, building materials and daily goods.

(A) Modified polypropylene Basic resin is crystalline random copolymer comprising a) 90 - 99 % by weight of propylene and b) 10 -1 % by weight of a-olefin having 2 - 10 carbon atoms excluding propylene. Preference is that ~-olefin is ethylene and is used in an amount of 2 - 8 ~ by weight.

When ~-olefin (b) used is less than 1 % by weight, smooth coating surface is scarcely produced, since melting point and melt viscosity of the resin are too high.
Although smooth surface of coated layer is able to be obtained when a base metal is pre-heated to 300 C or higher at fluidized dipping coating, such layer is not excellent in respect to strength and elongation, since the layer has been subjected to heat degration. When an amount of a-olefin (b) exceeds 10 ~ by weight, coated layer is inferior in heat resistance and surface hardness, since melting point of the resin is too low. Preferable melt index (JIS K-6758, referred to hereinafter as "MI") is 1 - 20.

Modified polypropylene is prepared by any of conventional processes such as tho$e disclosed in ~apanese patent Kokoku Nos. 43-27421 (melt kneading process), 44-15422 tsolution modification process) and 43-18144 (slurry modification process), .

Unsa~Urated carboxylic acid for graftil~s is acrylic acid, methacrylic acid, maleic acid, fumaric acid, itaconic acid, crotonic acid, citraconic acid, sorbic acid, mesaconic acid and the like Unsaturated dicarboxy anhydride is maleic anhydride, itaconic anhydride, citraconic anhydride, himic anhydride, and the like.
Preference are acrylic acid and maleic anhydride.

10Peroxide used in grafting is 2,5-dimethyl-2 r S-di (t-butylperoxy)hexane, 2,S-dimethyl-2,5-di(t-butylperoxy)-hexyne-3-dicumylperoxide, t-butylperoxylaurate, t-butylperoxyisobutyrate, diisopropylbenzene hydroperoxide and the like. Proper variety of peroxide is selected lS depending on basic resin to be modified and conditions for modification. Grafting is effected usually at 100 - 250~C.

Grafted polypropyLene thus obtained may be used alone and in the form o a mixture with unmodified polypropylene.

Unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride thereof contained in gxafted polypropylene is preferably 0.01 - S
parts by weight per 100 parts by weight of the crystalline random copolymer. When the amount is smaller than 0.01 part by weight, lack in adhesion is brought about and when the amount is larger than S parts by weight, discoloration is caused.

30MI of modified polypropylene is preferably 10 -60.

(~ Ethylene polymer Suitable ethylene polymer is low density poly-ethylene or linear low density polyethylene. Copolymer of etllylene witll 10~ by weight or less o~ ester of unsa~-urated carboxylic acid or viny]ester o~ ~a~ty acid may - 5 - 131661~

be used, said esters ~eing such as vinyl acetate, vinyl propionate, methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate and methyl methacrylate.

(C) Metal oxide or hydroxide Proper oxide or hydroxide is that of metals of IIa, IIIa and IVb of the Mandeleev's Periodic Table.

Example is magnesium oxide, calcium oxide, aluminum oxide and titanium dioxide, Preference is magnesium oxide, most preferably powdery one having at least 20 mg I/g MgO in terms of iodine absorption, such as "Kyowa Mag" ~ 30 manufactured by Kyowa Kagaku Co., Ltd., Japan.
Example of hydroxide is magnesium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, o-titanic acid, strontium hydroxide and the like, preferably calcium hydroxide.

Median diameter of the metal oxide or hydroxide is usually smaller than 25 ~m, preferably smaller than 10 ~m, from view points of uniform dispersibility in a resin phase and an improvement in adhesion.

(D) Polymer of vinyl cycloalkane The polymer includes homopolymer of vinyl cycloalkane, random copolymer of a vinyl cycloalkane with a small amount of the other vinyl cycloalkane or a-olefin or block copolymer of vinyl cycloalkane with a-olefin.
The block copolymer mentioned above is copolymer obtained by multi-step copolymerization between vinyl cycloalkane and a-olefin. It includes (1) copolymer obtained by polymerization of propylene alone after polymerization of vinyl cycloalkane is effected, (2) copolymer obtained - 6 - 131~6~

by random co-polymerization of propylene and the other ~-olefin after polymerization of vinyl cycloalkane is effected, (3) copolymer obtained by random copolymerization with propylene alone or other ~-olefin after vinyl cycloalkane firstly is polymerized and secondly propylene alone is polymerized. Preferable copolymer is the block copolymer above, and most preferably block copolymer with propylene as exemplified in (l) - (3) above.

Vinyl cycloalkane has six or more carbon atoms and includes vinyl cyclobutane, vinyl cyclopentane, vinyl-3-methylcyclopentane, vinyl cyclohexane, vinyl-2-methylcyclohexane, vinyl-3-methylcyclohexane, vinyl norbornane and the like.
(E) Compounding ratio The present composition contains (A?, (B), (C) and (D) in amounts of 80 - 95 parts by weight, 20 - 5 parts by wei~ht, preferably 15 - 7 parts by weight, 0.1 -lO parts by weight, preferably 0.5 - 5 parts by weight, and up to 20 parts by weight, respectively. As to (D), it should be controlled so that 0.0~1 - l.0 ~ by weight in terms of vinyl cycloalkane unit is present in the composition.

When amount of (B) is smaller than 5 parts by weight, no smooth surface of coated layer is obtained, but when the amount is larger than 20 parts by weight, remarkable degradation is brought about in heat resistance as well as in hardness of coating.
When amount of (C) is shorter than 0.1 part by weight, adhesion with a metal is decreased, while when the amount exceeds lO parts by weight, elongatiOn is lowered and smooth and glossy coated layer is rarely produced.
Furthermore, the use of such a large amount is not economical, since it is beyond saturation.

13~6619 (F) Production of the composition Any of conventional melt-kneading processes for an olefin polymer composition is available, e.g,, those using mixing rolls kneaders, Banbury mixers or extruders.
Before the melt-kneading, it is preferable to dry-blend the components by Henschel mixers, ribbon blenders or tumblers until a uniform composition is prepared. After being melt-kneaded, a composition is pelletized, mechanically pulverized under room temperature or freezing to obtain a powder coa~ing composition.

Other additives may be added, if desirea, such as commercially available phenol, sulfur or phosphor antioxidants such as "Irganox" ~ 1010, "Cyanox" ~ 1790, "Sumilizer" ~ BHT, "Goodright" ~ 3114, "Sumilizer" ~ TPS, and "Mark" ~ PEP-8; commercially available benzotriazole, benzophenoné and hindered amine light resistant agents such as "Tinuvin" ~ 328, "Sumisorb" ~ 510, "Sanol" CR) 770, "Tinuvin" ~ 622; halogen, phosphorus and inorganic fire retardants such as tetrabromobisphenol A, tris (~-chloroethyl~phosphate, antimony trioxide and magnesium hydroxide; pigments such as copper phthalocyanine blue, submarine blue, carbon black, titanium dioxide and cadmium yellow; fillers such as calcium carbonate, magnesium carbonate, calcium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, silicon dioxide, alumina, talc, mica, glass fiber, kaoline and wooden powder, and the like.
Materials to be coated are metals such as iron, aluminum, zinc, tin and their alloys and metals or glass on which the metals above are plated. They may be in any shape such as pipes, bars, wires, plates, boxes and the like.

The present composition may be applied to by fluidized dippin~, rotary shaping, sintering shaping or electrostatic coating.

Examples The present invention is explained in more detail by the following non-limitative examples.
a) Fluidized dipping coating Into a fluidized dipping vessel having a porous plate at a bottom is charged a powdery composition (80 mesh or less) prepared by a mechanical pulverizer.

Air is charged from the bottom of the vessel to form a stable fluidizing bed of the powder. A grid blasted steel plate (roughness. No. 100, produced by Taiyu Kizai K.K., defatted by xylene, 150 mm x 70 m~ x 3.2 mm) which has been heated in an oven at 230 C, is dipped in a fluidizing; bed for 15 seconds. After being taken out, the plate is subjected to baking in an oven (20G ~C) for 5 minutes and left to stand at room temperature until a coated plate is o~tained.
(b) ~elt Index JIS K-6758 for propylene polymer (230 C, 2.16 Kg load~
JIS K-6760 for ethylene polymer (19G ~C~
2.16 Kg load) ~c~ Adhesion Coatea layer obtained in (a) above is slit into a strip (1 mm wide) and subjected to a tear tester (50 mm/minute) to observe a value when peeling reaches (d~ Elongation Silicon greese is coated as a parting agent on a steel plate before being subjected to fluidizea dipping.
Coated layer is ready to be peeled off. Coated layer parted is slit to a strip (1 mm wide) and subjected to a tensile tester (50 mm/minute~.
(e~ Surface smoothness Marked eye observation.

(f) Heat resistance Vicat softening point ( 1 Kg load) according to JIS K-7206 using coated layer obtained in the same manner as in (d). Test specimens are piled up at least 1 mm high.
(g) Surface hardness Shore hardness according to JIS K-7215 using coated layer obtained in the same manner as in (d).
(h) Limiting viscosity [ n ]
Ubbelohde viscometer is used (135 C, in tetralin or 20 C in carbon tetrachloride).

Example 1 Crystalline propylene/ethylene random copolymer (ethylene 2.3 % by weight; ~I: 7.6 g/10 min., hereinafter referred to as PP (1~, 100 parts by weight), t-butyl peroxylaurate (0.2 part by weight), maleic anhydride (0.5 part by weight) and "Irganoxl' ~ 1010 (produced by Ciba Geigy~ 0.2 part by weight, antioxidant) were dry-blended for 3 minutes in a HensChel mixer.
The blend was extruded at 200 C through a uni-axial extruder (30 mm in diameter) to obtain modified PP(1).

The PP(1) (90 parts by weight), low density polyethylene (hereinafter referred to LDPE) and magnesium oxide ("Kyowa Mag" ~ 30j 20 parts by weight), propylene/vinyl cyclohexane copolymer (hereinafter referred to as PVCH (1), 1.0 part by weight), "Irganox"
1010 (0.2 part by weight, an antioxidant) and calcium stearate (O.03 part by weight, a neutralizer) were dry-blended in a Henschel mixer for 3 minutes.
-The blend was melt-kneaded at 200 C in a uni-axial extruder (30 mm in diameter) to product pellets (MI: 39 g/10 min.) which were subjected to a pulvelizer to obtain powder (80 mesh or less).
Powder coating was effected by fluidized dipping.
Evaluation of coated layer is shown in Table 1.

Examples 2 - 14 and Comparative Examples 1 - 6 F1uidized dippings were carried out according to Example 1 under the temperatures of steel plates heated before the dipping, using varieties and amounts of A, B, C and D components given in Table 1.

Results are shown in Table 1.
The table substantiates that components C and D
are critical factors to adhesion to metals and elongation o~ coated layer.

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Notes l: Modified PP (1): maleic anhydride-modified product (maleic anhydride content; 0.1 % by weight and MI;
48 g/10 min.) of crystalline propylenefethylene random copolymer (ethylene content; 2.3 % by weight and MI; 7.6 g/10 min.) 2: Modified PP (2~: blended product (MI; 22 g/10 min.) of 40 parts by weight of modified PP (l) and 60 parts by weight of crystalline propylene/ethylene random copolymer (ethylene content; 2.3 % by weight and MI; 17.6 g/10 min.) 3: Modified PP (3): maleic anhydride-modified product (maleic anhydride content; 0.11 ~ by weight and MI; 51 g/10 min.) of crystalline propylene/butene-1 copolymer (butene-1 content; 6.7 % by weight and MI; 3.8 g/10 min.) 4: LDPE: low density polyethylene (density; 0.927 g/cm3 and MI; 7.1 g/10 min.) 5: LLDPE: linear low density polyethylene (density;
0.925 g/cm3 and MI; 6.8 g/10 min.) 6: EVA: ethylene/vinyl acetate random copolymer (vinyl acetate content; 6.3 % by weight and MI;
6.7 g/10 min.) 7: EMMA: ethylene/methyl methacrylate random copolymer (methyl methacrylate content; 9.7 ~ by weight and MI; 7.0 g/10 min.) 8: MgO (l): "Kyowa Mag" ~ 30; a product of Kyowa Kagaku Co. (median diameter; 2.7 ~m, iodine absorption; 35 mg I/g MgO) 9: MgO (2): "Kyowa Mag" ~ 100; a product of Kyowa Kagaku Co. (median diameter; 2.5 ~m, iodine absorption; 110 mg I/g MgO) 10: Ca(OH)2: reagent, first class, a product of Wako Junyaku Co. (median diameter; 2.4 ~m) 5 11: Mg(OH)2: reagent, a product of Wako Junyaku Co.
(median diameter; 3.1 ~m) - 16 - 1316~1~

12: PVCH (1): propylene/vinyl cyclohexane copolymer (limiting viscosity in tetralin; 1.9 dl/g and vinyl cyclohexane content; 0.98 % by weight), prepared according to the procedure disclosed in Japanese Patent Kokai Nos. 60-139710 and 60-139731.
13: PVCH (2): propylene/ethylene/vinyl cyclohexane copolymer (limiting viscosity in tetralin; 2.2 dl/g, ethylene content; 3.4 % by weight and vinyl cyclohexane content; 0.21 % by weight), prepared according to the similar procedure to PVCH (1).
14: PVCH (3): vinyl cyclohexane homopolymer (limiting viscosity in carbon tetrachloride; 0.6 dl/g), prepared by similar procedure to PVCH (1).
15: PP (2): crystalline propylene/ethylene random copolymer (limiting viscosity in tetralin; 2.3 dl/g and ethylene content; 3.8 ~ by weight) 16: PP (3): propylene homopolymer (limiting viscosity in tetralin; 1.8 dl/g)

Claims (7)

1. A resinous composition for powder coating which comprises (A) 80 - 95 parts by weight of a modified polypropylene in which an unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride thereof is grafted onto at least a part of a crystalline random copolymer of (a) 90 - 99% by weight of propylene and (b) 10 - 1% by weight of an .alpha.-olefin having
2-10 carbon atoms excluding propylene, said modified polypropylene having a melt index of 10 - 60 g/10 min. and containing 0.01 - 5% by weight of said unsaturated carboxylic acid or anhydride thereof, (B) 20 - 5 parts by weight of at least one ethylene polymer selected from a low density polyethylene, a linear low density polyethylene and a copolymer of ethylene with 10% by weight or less of an ester of an unsaturated carboxylic acid or a vinly ester of a fatty acid, (C) 0.1 - 10 parts by weight of an oxide or hydroxide of a metal of IIa, IIIa or IVb of the Mandeleev's Periodic Table, and (D) a vinyl cycloalkane polymer having at least six carbon atoms in such an amount that the units of vinyl cycloalkane are 0.001 - 1.0% by weight of the composition.

2. A composition according to Claim 1, wherein the crystalline random copolymer is a propylene/ethylene copolymer.
3. A composition according to Claim 1, wherein graft-copolymerization for production of the modified polypropylene (A) is conducted at a temperture of 100 -250°C in the presence of a peroxide.
4 A composition according to Claim 1, wherein the ethylene polymer (B) is a low density polyethylene or linear low density polyethylene.
5. A composition according to Claim 1, wherein the metal oxide or hydroxide (C) is magnesium oxide, calcium hydroxide or magnesium hydroxide.
6. A composition according to Claim 1, wherein said vinyl cycloalkane is vinyl cyclobutane, vinyl cyclopentane, vinyl-3-methylcyclopentane, vinyl cyclohexane, vinyl-2-methylcyclohexane, vinyl-3-methylcyclohexane or vinyl-norbornane.
7. A composition according to Claim 6, wherein said vinyl cycloalkane is vinyl cyclohexane.
CA000575311A 1988-08-19 1988-08-19 Resinous composition for powder coating Expired - Fee Related CA1316619C (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000575311A CA1316619C (en) 1988-08-19 1988-08-19 Resinous composition for powder coating

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000575311A CA1316619C (en) 1988-08-19 1988-08-19 Resinous composition for powder coating

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1316619C true CA1316619C (en) 1993-04-20

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Family Applications (1)

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CA000575311A Expired - Fee Related CA1316619C (en) 1988-08-19 1988-08-19 Resinous composition for powder coating

Country Status (1)

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