CA2078337A1 - High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties - Google Patents
High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile propertiesInfo
- Publication number
- CA2078337A1 CA2078337A1 CA 2078337 CA2078337A CA2078337A1 CA 2078337 A1 CA2078337 A1 CA 2078337A1 CA 2078337 CA2078337 CA 2078337 CA 2078337 A CA2078337 A CA 2078337A CA 2078337 A1 CA2078337 A1 CA 2078337A1
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- rubber
- composition
- weight percent
- monomer
- mass
- 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.)
- Abandoned
Links
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08L—COMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
- C08L35/00—Compositions of homopolymers or copolymers of compounds having one or more unsaturated aliphatic radicals, each having only one carbon-to-carbon double bond, and at least one being terminated by a carboxyl radical, and containing at least one other carboxyl radical in the molecule, or of salts, anhydrides, esters, amides, imides or nitriles thereof; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
- C08L35/06—Copolymers with vinyl aromatic monomers
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08L—COMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
- C08L51/00—Compositions of graft polymers in which the grafted component is obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers
- C08L51/04—Compositions of graft polymers in which the grafted component is obtained by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds; Compositions of derivatives of such polymers grafted on to rubbers
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
- Polymers & Plastics (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Graft Or Block Polymers (AREA)
- Compositions Of Macromolecular Compounds (AREA)
- Paper (AREA)
Abstract
A rubber-modified, rigid, heat- and impact resistant polymer composition comprising: (a) an interpolymer comprising monovinylidene aromatic monomer, maleimide monomer and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer polymerized therein; and (b) from 7 to 25 weight percent of a first graft copolymer prepared by an emulsion process and comprising from 30 to 70 weight percent of a copolymer (A) comprising in polymerized form from 10 to 60 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, the copolymer (A) being grafted at least in part to a rubbery substrate polymer (B) which is from 30 to 70 percent of the graft copolymer by weight and has a rubber particle size distribution wherein the average particle size is from 0.05 to 0.65 microns;
and (c) from 17 to 85 weight percent of a second graft copolymer prepared by a mass polymerization technique and comprising a copolymer (C) comprising in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, the copolymer (C) being grafted at least in part to a rubbery substrate polymer (D), the substrate polymer having an average particle diameter of less than 1 micron, said composition having a total rubber content of from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and a mass rubber to total rubber weight ratio of from 0.09 to 0.4.
Said composition being useful as a molding material.
and (c) from 17 to 85 weight percent of a second graft copolymer prepared by a mass polymerization technique and comprising a copolymer (C) comprising in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, the copolymer (C) being grafted at least in part to a rubbery substrate polymer (D), the substrate polymer having an average particle diameter of less than 1 micron, said composition having a total rubber content of from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and a mass rubber to total rubber weight ratio of from 0.09 to 0.4.
Said composition being useful as a molding material.
Description
WO91/1~5~ PCTIUS91/02276 -1- 2~g3~37 HIGH HEAT STYRENIC COPOLYMER 8LENDS HAVING IMP~0VED
TENSILE PROPERTIES
The present invention pertains to certainrubber-modified monovinylidene aromatic polymer compositions which exhibit a beneficial combination of physicl characteristics.
It is well known in the art that various relatively rigid and/or brittle interpolymers of monvinylidene aromatic monomers with ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers can be made more impact resstant by the inclusion of amounts of various types of elastomeric materials, such as various rubbers, into a matrix or continuous phase of said interpolymers. The elastomeric materials usually are in the form of discrete particles, such partlcles havig amounts of the matrix interpolymer. or an inter- or homopolymer similar thereto, graft-polymerized thereto. These types of rubber-modified, impact-resistant polmeric compositions are commonly known and referred to as graft copolymers or polyblends. Among the bestknown of these types of compositions are the ABS or ABS-type compositions.
Compositionally, ABS or ABS-type compositions generally comprise a combination of an elastomer, usually containing polymerized butadiene, with a rigid "'' -. , .. , . ~ . .. ... . ... , . - . . - - . .. . ,. .: :, .. . .. .
W091/1~5~ PCT/VS91/02276 2 ~r~ ;~ z interpolymer of a monovinylidene aromatic monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer.
Structurally, ABS or ABS-type compositions usually consist of the rigid, matrix or continuous phase having dispersed therein particles of the elastomer, such particles usually having grafted thereto amounts of the rigid interpolymer or a similar inter- or homopolymer.
It is also well ~nown in the art that the physical properties of these t~pes of compositions are greatly affected by the relative amounts of elastomer particles havin~ different sizes and particle structures, as well as the structures of the individual rubber particles (i.e., rubber particle morphology).
There are well-known advantages and disadvantages accompanying the use of either of the two main rubber-particle types in rubber-modified polymer compositions. It is generally believed that grafted rubber particles containing occlusions of matrix polymer therein, this being one of the two main rubber-particle types, provide more impact resistance than the same amount of rubber in the form of similarly grafted, solid rubber particles. the latter being the other main particle type. The grafted, occlusion-containing rubber particles are usually formed and grafted in a mass-type or mass-suspension-type polymerization process where a previously-produced rubber is dissolved in one or more polymerizable monomers with op'ional diluents, which monomers are thereafter polymerized. Occlusion--containing particles, produced in such mass, mass-solution or mass-suspension processes or variations of these processes are hereafter referred to as "mass particles." It is difficult. however, using available types of rubber and mass procecs equipment to produce WO91/15~ 7 !J ~6 ~ ~
groups of mass particles having volume average diameters less than 0.5~.
The other main type of rubber particle morphology (i.e., the above-mentioned "solid" or non-occluded grafted rubber particle) is usually achieved via emulsion polymerization of the rubber in the form of an aqueous latex. After the rubber is made, monomers which are polymerizable and graftable (e.g., styrene and acrylonitrile) are usually added to the rubber-containing latex and polymerized to form the graft portion as well as amounts of matrix polymer. The non-occluded type of rubber particles, produced via an emulsion polymerization process, are hereinafter referred to as "emulsion particles." When these emulsion particles have been grafted with a different, relatively rigid polymer, but still have a high rubber concentration, at least about 30 weight percent or so, these compositions are very suitable for blending with additional amounts of the same or different rigid polymer, optionally containing additional amounts of rubber, to achieve desired rubber contents in the resultant compositions. Such blendable intermediates are often referred to as "grafted rubben concentrates"
and can be used to produce a wide variety of rubber--modified polymer compositions.
It is further known that the heat distortion temperature or softening point of ABS or ABS-type composition can be raised by incorporating into the compositions materials such as N-phenylmaleimide, o-methyl styrene, and copolvmers of styrene with maleic anhydride. However, the incorporation of these materials into A3S or ABS-type compositions usually is accompanied by some decrease in other physical - : : . .: ,. ~ .. . .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ -4-properties. For example, the use of styrene-maleic anhydride can result in uncontrolled cross-linking at temperatures greater than 230C, resulting in unpredictable decreases in impact and melt flow rate properties. Similarly. the use of Q-methyl styrene as a comonomer can result in a composition which is difficult to process. Specifically, the use of a-methyl styrene can lower the ceiling temperature of the resulting composition, the result being depolymerization and reduced physical properties. Accordingly, the use of certain materials may improve the heat distortion temperature of an ABS or ABS-type composition, but generally at the expense of other physical properties.
Thus, a long-standing problem is the production of an ABS or ABS-type composition having a high heat distortion temperature while also exhibiting impact and tensile strength properties.
U.S. Patent 4,567,233 discloses a rubber--modified styrenic resin composition comprising up to four components. One component is a graft copolymer comprising a specific matrix resin and emulsion rubber particle having an average particle size of from 0.1 to 0.5~. Another component is a graft copolymer comprising a specific matrix resin and a mass or mass-suspension rubber particle having an average particle size of from ~.7 to 4~. The amount of the small particle component must be from 50 to 97 percent of the total weight of the two rubber-containing components. A third component includes a copolymer of a vinyl aromatic compound, a maleimide compound, and optionally a copolymerizable vinyl compound. An optional fourth component is a polymer of a vinyl aromatic compound and an unsaturated nitrile compound. Said patent discloses that such . .... .. , ~ . . . . ..
WO91/155~ 2 ~ ~ $ 3 ~ J PCT/~S91/~2276 compositions have good heat stability and falling dart impact properties. However, the problem o~ tensile strength is not discussed.
It is known that the use of small rubber particles improves tensile properties ~or a given rubber content, but sacri~ices impact properties. Further, the use of emulsion particles, which generally are smaller, results in degradation of thermal properties, especially the Vicat softening point, compared to the use of mass particles. This is because higher rubber levels are required in an emulsion ABS to attain a given impact ~, value. The Vicat softening point temperature is further reduced by the presence of residuals from the emulsion process. Thus, while the use of emulsion particles in ABS and ABS-type polymers is common for the improvernent ,, of certain properties, such use is detrimental to the thermal and tensile strength properties of these resins.
Since the foregoing problem is fairly commonly encountered within the plastics molding industry, it would be highly desirable if there could be provided rubber-modified molding compositions having excellent tensile,properties and, particularly. if such could be accomplished without attendant sacrifices in other important properties such as impact strength and heat resistance.
It has now been discovered that certain rubber--modi~ied monovinylidene aromatic polymer compositions can be provided having very high tensile properties while still maintaining a desirable co~bination o~ heat resistance and impact strength by proper and careful control and selection of several key parameters and crit~rion. In part1cula~. it has been ~ound that in WOgl/15~W ~ PCT/US91/OZ~76 ~ -6-order to suitably accomplish the foregoing, one must utilize the following within the context of the present composition: a mass rubber to total rubber weight ratio of from 0.09 to 0.4; said mass rubber ingredient having an average particle size of less than one micron; as part of the composition a copolymer having a weight average molecular weight of at least 120,000, said copolymer being polymerized from a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and a maleimide monomer; and a total rubber content within such composition of from 8.5 to l3.5 weight percent on a total composition weight basis.
Accordingly, the present invention is an improved rubber-modified, rigid, heat-and impact-resistant polymeric blend composition comprising:
(1) from 7 to 76 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of an interpolymer of a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, a maleimide monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer;
(2) from 7 to 25 weight percent~ based on the rubber-modified composition, of a first graft copolymer composition, prepared by an emulsion process: and (3) from 17 to 85 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a second graft copolymer composition prepared by a mass type process wherein (a) the weight average molecular weight of the interpolymer is at least l20.000, :
WO 91/lg~44 2 ~ 7 ~q 3 3 7cr/US9l/02~76 (b) the first graft copolymer composition comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of a copolymer (A) grafted at least in part to from 30 to 70 weight percent o~ an emulsion rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65 micron, (c) the said copolymer (A) comprises in polymerized form from 10 to 60 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (d) the second graft copolymer composition comprises a copolymer (B) grafted at least in part to a mass rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of less than one micron, (e) copolymer (B) comprises in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsatuated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (f) the total rubber content of the said rubber-modified composition comprises from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and (g) the weight ratio of rubber particles prepared by mass polymerization to the total rubber 3 content of the rubber-modified composition is from 0.09 to 0.4.
Tensile strength is an important physical property for end uses such as automotive interior trim, lighting, cowl vents, air-directing grills, and other ., .-- .. ., .. - - . - . . - . . . . .
.-;. . :~ .-- . . :, . . : .
: :. . `.. , . . : . ., . .: . . , . ` ~ : .. ,,: , :, :: . ... . . ~ .: . . : , : :, .: ~ : ' ',: ' ': ' ': ',-' , :, ' ' .-: ' ` ' ' : :' .: ~ : ' ~ ,.
WO91/155~ ~ ~3~ PCT/US91tO2~76 ~J~ - 8-.. ~
applications which require molded parts with the ability to bear loads and to withstand the forces associated with mechanical fastening. The compositions of the present invention are well-suited for such applications in view of the combination of tensile strength, heat resistance, and impact strength exhibited by these compositions.
The present invention comprises three essential elements: (a) a monovinylidene aromatic / maleimide /
ethylenically unsaturated nitrile interpolymer; (b) a first graft copolymer containing emulsion particles (rubber) dispersed therein; an~ (c) a second graft copolymer containing mass particles (rubber) dispersed therein. It should be noted that as used herein the terms "polymer" and "polymerization" are generic, and can include the more specific cases of "homo , co- and interpolymer" and "homo-, co- and interpolymerization,"
respectively.
The first of the three above-mentioned essential elements of the present invention comprises an interpolymer having polymerized therein maleimide monomer, monovinylidene aromatic monomer and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer. For the purposes of the present invention, these interpolymers are hereinafter referred to as "MSAN-type" since the most common example of these polymers is prepared from a maleimide monomer. styrene, and acrylonitrile. The 3 MSAN-type interpolymer preferably is formed from 15 to 43 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer, 14 to 75 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer, and 8 to 50 weight percent of maleimide monomer. The weight average molecular weight of the MSAN-type polymer advantageously is at least WO91/155~ PCT/US91/02t76 _g_ 2~ ~()3r~7l 120,000 and preferably is at least 150.000. Preferably, the composition of the present invention comprises from 7 to 76 weight percent of the MSAN-type polymer.
Examples of the monovinylidene aromatic monomers which, in polymerized form~ may be included in compositions according to the present invention are styrene; alpha-alkyl monovinylidene aromatic monomers including e.g., alpha-methylstyrene, alpha-ethylstyrene, alpha-methylvinyltoluene, alpha-methyl dialkylstyrenes, etc.; ring substituted alkyl styrenes (including e.g., ortho-, meta-, and paravinyl toluene; o-ethylstyrene;
p-ethylstyrene; 2,4-dimethylstyrene; p-tertiarybutyl styrene; etc.); ring-substituted halostyrenes including e.g., o-chlorostyrene, p-chlorostyrene. o-bromostyrene, 2,4-dichlorostyrene, etc.; ring-alkyl, ring--halosubstituted styrenes including e.g., 2-chloro-4--methylstyrene, 2,6-dichloro-4-methylstyrene, etc.;
vinyl naphthalene; vinyl anthracene, and the like. The alkyl substituents generally have 1 to 4 carbon atoms and may include isopropyl and isobutyl groups. If so desired, mixtures of such monovinylidene aromatic monomers may be employed. Typically, the monovinylidene aromatic monomer will constitu~e from 14 to about 75, preferably from 50 to 70, weight percent of the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Maleimide monomers suitably employed in the present invention include maleimide. N-alkylmaleimide 3 and N-arylimaleimide compounds. In the N-aryl maleimides, which are preferred, the aryl substituent may have one or more of the atoms replaced by other inert moieties such as halo or Lower alkyl. Suitable N-aryl maleimides are disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,652,726. The aryl groups that may be present in the . ..
WO91/15~ PCTlUS91/02276 N-aryl maleimides include, for example, phenyl, ~--diphenyl, 1-naphthyl, all the mono- and di-methylphenyl isomers, 2,6-diethylphenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-chlorophenyl, 4-bromophenyl and other mono- and di-halophenyl isomers, 2,4,6-trichlorophenyl. 214,6-tribromophenyl, 4-n--butylphenyl, 2-methyl-4-n-butylphenyl, Ll-benzylphenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-methoxyphenyl, 2-methoxy-5-chlorophenyl, 2-methoxy-5-bromophenyl, 2,5-dimethoxy-4-chlorophenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-ethoxyphenyl, 2,5-diethoxyphenyl, 4-phenoxyphenyl, 4-methoxycarbonylphenyl, 4-cyanophenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-nitrophenyl and methyl-chlorophenyl (2,3-, 2,4-, 2,5- and 4,3-isomers). A preferred N-aryl maleimide monomer is N-phenylmaleimide. Mixtures of maleimide monomers may be employed. Suitably, the maleimide monomer is from 8 to 50, preferably from 8 to 36, weight percent of the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Exemplary of the unsaturated nitrile monomers which may be included are acrylonitrile, methacrylonitrilet ethacrylonitrile, and mixtures thereof. The unsaturated nitrile is generally employed in the MSAN-type interpolymer in an amount of from 15 to 43, preferably from 20 to 25 ~leight percent based on the total weight of maleimide monomer, monovinylidene aromatic monomer and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer employed in preparing the MSAN-type interpolymer containing those three monomers.
In addi~ion to maleimide monomers, mono-3 -vinylidene aromatic monomers and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers, various additional monomers may be desirably included, in polymerized form, in the rubber-modified polymer compositions according to the present invention. Exemplary of such additional monomers are conjugated 1,3 dienes (e.g., butadiene, 5~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ ~ 7 ~ 3 ?,,~ ~
isoprene, etc.); alpha- or beta-unsaturated monobasic acids and derivatives thereof (e.g., acrylic acid, methylacrylate, ethylacrylate, butyl acrylate, 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, methacrylic acid and the correspondin~ esters thereof such as methyl methacrylate, etc., acrylamide, methacrylamide and the like); vinyl halides such as vinyl chloride, vinyl bromide, etc.; vinylidene chloride, vinylidene bromide, etc.; vinyl esters such as vinyl acetate, vinyl propionate~ etc.; dialkyl maleates or fumarates such as dimethyl maleate, diethyl maleate, dibutyl maleate, the corresponding fumarates, etc. Preferred examples of these additional monomers include C1_4 alkyl methacrylates, including mixtures thereof. As is known in the art 9 the amount of these monomers which may be included will vary as the result of various factors.
The amount of such monomers employed will generally be less than 10 weight percent based on the total weight of the monomers employed in preparing the non-rubber, polymeric portions of the rubber-reinforced product of the invention.
The various additional monomers can be incorporated into compositions according to the present invention in any or all of several ways. For example, one or more of the additional monomers may be interpolymerized into the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Additionally, one or more of the additional monomers can be graft polymerized onto, and in the case of mass particles, polymerized and occluded within the rubber particles. In addition, one or more of the additional monomers can be otherwise polymerized into polymeric components which can be comblned e,g., blended, into .
.
q ~S 3 PCT/US91/02276 rubber-modified polymer compositions according to the present invention.
The first graft copolymer comprises at least one type of rubber particle. produced in an emulsion polymerization process, the particle beincr grafted with an SAN or SAN-type interpolymer comprising polymerized therein from 10 to 60 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer.
0 Advantageously, the composition of the present invention comprises from 7 to 25 weight percent of the first graft copolymer. Certain preferred compositions of the invention comprise a greater amount of the second graft copolymer than the first graft copoly~er. For example one preferred embodiment of the invention employs 49 percent or less of the first graft copolymer based upon the total weight of the first and second graft copolymer. The emulsion rubber particle can have a monomodal, but preferably has a bimodal, particle size distribution. Thus, the first graft copolymer may contain emulsion particles having different morphologies. The first graft copoly~er advantageously comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of the SAN or SAN-type interpolymer and from 30 to 70 weight percent emulsion rubber particle. Preferably, the first graft copolymer comprises from 35 to 55 weight percent emulsion rubber particle. Preferably, the emulsion rubber particle comprises polybutadiene rubber. The first graft copolymer preferably has a rubber particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65~.
Various substrate rubbers (onto which the superstrate polymer may be grafted during polymerization in the presence of such rubber ) are utilizable as the : , . : , ~ :
' ~
WO91/155~ PCT/~91/02276 ~ 33 ~
emulsion particles. These rubbers include diene rubbers, ethylene propylene rubbers, ethylene propylene diene (EPDM) rubbers, acrylate rubbers, polyisoprene rubbers, halogen-containing rubbers and mixtures thereof as well as interpolymers of rubber-forming monomers with other copolymerizable monomers. The preferred rubbers for use in preparing said emulsion particles are diene rubbers or mixtures of diene rubbers, i.e.? any rubbery polymers (a polymer having a second order glass transition temperature not higher than 0C, preferably not hi~her than -20C~ as determined by ASTM Method Test D-746-52T) of one or more conjugated 1,3-dienes. e.g., butadiene, isoprene, piperylene, chloroprene, etc. Such rubbers include homopolymers and interpolymers of conjugated 1,3-dienes with up to an equal amount by weight of one or more copolymerizable monoethylenically unsaturated monomers, such as monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., styrene; a ring-substituted alkylstyrene 9 such as o-, m-, and p-vinyl toluene or 2,4-dimethylstyrene, the ring-substituted ethylstyrenes, p-tert-butylstyrene, etc.; an alpha-alkylstyrene, such as alpha-methylstyrene, alpha-ethylstyrene, alpha--methyl-p-methylstyrene, etc.; vinyl naphthalene, etc.);
ring-substituted halo monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g.. the o-, m-. and p-chlorostyrenes, 2,4-dibromostyrene, 2-methyl-4-chlorostyrene, etc.);
acrylonitrile; methacrylonitrile: alkyl acrylates (e.g., methyl acrylate, butyl acrylate. 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, etc.); the corresponding alkyl methacrylates;
acryla~ides (e.g., acrylamide, methacrylamide, N-butyl acrylamide, etc.); unsaturated ketones (e.g.. methyl vinyl ketone, methyl isopropenyl ketone, etc.); alpha--olefins (e.g., ethylene, propylene, etc.); pyridines;
vinyl esters (e.g., vinyl acetate, vinyl stearate, , .
WO91/15~ ~I PCT/US91/02276 ~? '3 _ 1 Ll_ etc.); vinyl and vinylidene halides (e.g., the vinyl and vinylidene chlorides and bromides, etc.); and the like.
A preferred group of rubbers for use as the emulsion rubber particles are those consisting essentially of 70 to 100 percent by weight of butadiene and/or isoprene and up to 30 percent by weight of monomers selected from the group consisting of monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., styrene) and unsaturated nitriles (e.g., acrylonitrile) or mixtures thereof. Particularly advantageous emulsion rubbery polymer substrates are butadiene homopolymer or an interpolymer of 90 to 99 percent by weight butadiene and 1 to 10 percent by weight of acrylonitrile and/or styrene.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention in which the first graft copolymer contains bimodal emulsion particles, one of the rubber components hereinafter referred to as the small particle component, has a relatively small average particle size, the particles thereof advantageously having a volume average particle diameter of from 0.05 to 0.25~ and preferably a number average particle diameter of from 0.013 to 0.17~.
As discussed above, these small-sized particles are most conveniently prepared by emulsion polymerizing a mixture of rubber-forming monomers to form a dispersion of uniformly sized particles of the desired size, as is well known in the art. See, for example, ~.S. Patents 30 3,509,237; 3,928.494; 4,243,769; and 4,250,271 which teach suitable processés. It has been found that this component preferably has a volume average particle diameter of from 0.08 to 0.20~. preferably with a number average particle diameter of from 0.02 to 0.13~. -Another rubber component to be included in this -: . . . . .
, . ~ , :: ,:: .. ,: : . . : ~
WO91/15~ s~ S91/0Z276 preferred rubber-modified composition is referred to as the large emulsion particle component. This component has a volume average particle diameter of from 0.35 to 0.651u, preferably from 0.4 to 0.6,u. Since most emulsion polymerization processes do not inherently produce particles in the aforementioned large emulsion particle size range, the particles of this component can be produced by agglomerating or coagulating emulsion--produced dispersions of smaller rubber particles, either before, during or after the particles are grafted. See, for example, U.S. Patents 3,~51,370;
3,666,704; 3,956,218; and 3,825,621 which teach suitable processes. A particularly desirable technique for the controlled agglomeration of the particles of an emulsion-prepared rubber in an aqueous dispersion is taught in U.S~ Patent 4,419,496 entitled "Particle Agglomeration in Rubber Latices" by D. E. Henton and T. M. O'Brien.
The aforementioned small and large emulsion rubber particles advantageously are employed ir a weight ratio range of the former to the latter of from 0.33 to 4, and preferably from 0.4 to l. As discussed above, within the ranges of particle types and amounts specified for the emulsion component, the use of the relatively larger particles in this component and/or the use of larger percentages of this component will usually result in better impact-resistance in the resultant polymer composition.
The e~ulsion particle component advantageously makes up from 60 to 91 weight percent of the rubber in the present invention. However, it is preferred to employ from 60 to 88 weight percent, while from 60 to 70 weight percent is especially preferable. Within these .', : ' ' ' , :`'-.' ',. ';:' ' , " " . ' "' ., '.: .: '.: '-.. ' '.': `' ': '' ,' ,.' ' : ' " ' :
~ " '' '' ' ', ' ' ;' ':, ' . ~, '. ,' ,' ` ' . ','. ' ~ , , ' ' ' ., ' .' : ,: :, : ' . ' WO91/15~ ~ PCT/US91/02276 ranges, the amount of emulsion particle rubber helps to control the tensile properties of the resultant polymeric composition. At constant rubber content, increasing the`amoùnt of emulsion particle rubber increases the tensile properties. Reducin~ the percentage of emulsion particle rubber will generally produce tougher resultant compositions with the loss of some tensile properties.
The second graft copolymer comprises at least one type of rubber particle produced in a mass or mass-suspension polymerization process, the particle being grafted with an SAN or SAN-type interpolymer comprising polymerized therein from 15 to 36 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer.
Advantageously, the composition of the present invention comprises from 17 to 85 weight percent of the second graft copolymer. The mass rubber particle can have a polymodal particle size distribution, such as a bimodal distribution, but preferably has a monomodal particle size distribution. Advantageously, the mass rubber particle has a volume average particle diameter of less than 1~.
The rubber substrate used for the second graft copolymer advantageously is a diene homopolymer material, such as poly(1,3-butadiene), or a block or random copolymer of at least 30, more preferably from 50 3 to 85, weight percent, 1,3-butadiene and up to about 70, more preferably from about 15 to 50, weight percent, of a monovinylidene aromatic compound, preferably styrene.
This rubber substrate will, here again, typically have a second order glass transition temperature of 0C or less, preferably -20C or less. Preferred rubbers for :. . . : : . . . .
. . . : . . . .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/~2276 use as the mass rubber particles are ho~opolymers o~
butadiene.
The mass particle advantageous~y has a volume average particle diameter of less than 1~, preferably from 0.15 to 0.95~, and a number average particle diameter of from 0.1 to 0.45~. More preferably, the volume average diameter of the particles of this component is from 0.4 to 0.9~ and the number average diameter thereof is from about 0.2 to about 0.4~. Most preferably, the volume average particle size is from 0.4 to 0.69. The mass particle component advantageously makes up from 9 to 40 weight percent of the total rubber in the composition of the present invention, preferably from 12 to 40, and most preferably from 30 to 40 weight percent thereof. Particles sizes are measured using a commercially available Coulter Counter, by visual phase contrast microscopy or electron microscopy techniques supplemented according to methods well known in the art.
It is generally preferred that the second graft copolymer have a total rubber content of 20 weight percent or less of the total weight of said graft -copolymer, the remainder being an SAN or SAN-type -interpolymer. Preferred second graft copolymers thus typically have a rubber content, on the basis of that graft copolymer per se, in the range of from 0.75 to 15, especially ~rom 4 to 9, weight percent.
Within the above-described ranges, the use of this mass rubber particle component imparts desirable levels of impact-resistance to the resultant polymer compositions without adversely affecting the tensile properties to an expected and unacceptable degree. In fact, compositions accordlng to the present invention .
~''' .', " ' . . '. .' '. . . ', '', ' ' ,' . . '., ' ' ,. - . '.' " : ' ' ' "; .' '' ' ' ' ' , ,', " ' ' ., . '~', ',' . , ' ' . " ' " , ., ~ .. ~ , . . , ,,: , . . . .. . ....
. .. ,, : . ,. . ., ,., ~, . ~ ... . ... .. ..
WO91/15~ ' PCT/US91/02276 exhibit an excellent combination of Vicat, tensile, and impact-resistance for the sizes of the particles and the amount of rubber they contain. The use of the indicated amounts of the indicated mass rubber particles thus provides rubber-modified molding compositlons having very high tensile characteristics while still providing desirable levels of impact resistance and Vicat heat resistance.
It has been found most desirable for the second graft copolymer to use particles resulting from a mass--type or mass-suspension-type grafting process which produces particles having grafted thereto and occluded therein amounts of a desired superstrate polymer, preferably an SAN or SAN-type polymer. Such mass processes, as is well known in the art, can be very satisfactorily employed to produce rubber particles having appropriate sizes for utilization in this component. See, for example, U.S. Patents 3,509,237 and 4,239,863 which teach suitable processes.
In general, in compositions according to the present invention, there will be dispersed therein in the form of particles, a total of from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent rubber, based on the total rubber--modified polymer composition weight. If larger rubber contents are employed, then tensile properties and the Vicat heat distortion temperature generally will be reduced. Preferably, the rubber-modified compositions 3 hereof contain a total of from 10 to 13.5 weight percent of dispersed rubbery polymer on a total composition weight basis. Preferably, the weight ratio of mass rubber to total rubber in the composition is from 0.09 W091/15~ PCT/US91/~2276 2 ~ rl~ g ~
to 0.4. More preferably, this ratio is from 0.12 to 0.4, and most preferably from 0.3 to 0.4.
One important criterion of the present invention is that the particulate rubber dispersed in the polymeric matrix comprises at least two different components. It is generally preferred that the dispersed particulate rubber consist essentially of said particulate components. By the term "rubber particle component" is meant a group of rubber particles of the same rubber particle type and having about the same particle size. The two main rubber particle types are (1) the occluded particles made in a mass-type process and (2) the solid, non-occluded particles made in an emulsion polymerization process. Each rubber component can then be characterized by the combination of the average size of the particles and the process by which they are formed. The average particle size of a rubber particle component, as used herein, will, unless otherwise specified, refer to the volume average diameter of the group of particles making up the rubber component of p~article type. In most cases, the volume average diameter of a group of particles is the same as the weight average. In the case of the emulsion-2S -produced rubber particles, the average particle diameter measurement is typically made before any of the polymer is grafted thereto, while in the case of the mass particles, the size generally includes the polymer 3Q grafted to the rubber particles and occlusions of polymer within the partlcles. The volume average diameters of emulsion particle groups having average particle diameters of less than about one micron can be conveniently determined, as can the number average diameters and the particle size distribution, by '' .
. . - . ~ ,.
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ 20-hydrodynamic chromatography (HDC). Hydrodynamic chromatography is explained in U.S. Patent No.
3,865,717, and is also discussed in the Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, V. 89, No. l, pp. 94-106 (lg82). In the case of groups of mass particles and groups of emulsion particles having average particle diameters of more than about one micron, the volume average diameters, number average diameters and particle size distributions can be determined by the analysis of transmission electron micrographs of the compositions containing the particles according to methods well known in the art.
It is recognized, of course, that the various rubber particle components comprise particles having a range of sizes; the above analytical techniques indicate, however, that the particles of a particular rubber particle component generally have a fairly narrow range of particle sizes. By this it is meant that the ratio of the volume average particle diameter oP a particle group to the number average particle diameter of the same particle group is generally in the range of ~rom 1 to 3.5.
Although the aforementioned rubber ingredients may contain up to 2 percent of a cross-linking agent, based on the weight of the rubber-forming monomer or monomers, cross~linking may present problems in dissolving the rubber in the monomers for the graft 3 polymerization reaction, particularly for a mass or suspension polymerization reaction, and is therefore not generally preferred for mass or suspension polymerized ingredients. In addition, excessive cross-linking can result in loss of the rubbery characteristics and is there~ore also not generally pre~erred even for the WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 -21- 2 ~
emulsion polymerized ingredients. In the event that a cross-linking agent is employed it can be any of the agents conventionally employed for cross-linking diene rubbers, for example, divinylbenzene, diallyl maleate, diallyl fumarate, diallyl adipate, allyl acrylate, allyl methacrylate, diacrylates and dimethylacrylates of polyhydric alcohols (e.g., ethylene glycol dimethylacrylate, etc.), and the like.
It may also be desirable to include in the present ABS-type compositions amounts of other polymers and/or copolymers such as polymers and/or copolymers of phenylene oxide, polycarbonates and polyester polycarbonates.
In graft polymerization reactions, as is well known in the art, the desired polymerizable monomers are combined with the preformed rubber substrate and the monomers are then polymerized to chemically combine or graft at least a portion of the forming polymer upon the rubber substrate. Depending upon the ratio of monomers to rubber substrate and the polymerization conditions, it is possible to achieve both the grafting of the desired amount of polymer onto the rubber substrate and the polymerization of ungrafted polymer to provide all or a portion of the matrix at the same time.
. .
Various techniques are customarily employed for polymerizing rubber monomers including Ziegler-Natta, anionic and free radical polymerization. Free radical emulsion polymerization can be used to produce a latex emulsion which is useful as the base for emulsion polymerization o~ the graft polymer. See, for example, U.S. Patent 4,243,76i.
.:-. .
':
W091/~5~ ~ PCT/US91/02276 ?,~ ?,~ t; -22-~ .~
The various techniques suitable for producing the polymeric components of the present invention are well known in the art. Examples of these known polymerization processes include mass, mass-solution, mass-suspension, suspension and emulsion polymerization processes as well as other modification and/or combi~ations of such processes. See, for example, U.S.
Patents 3,509,237; 3,923,494; 4,239,863; 4,243~765; and 4,250,271; which teach such processes. As is well known in the art, the same reaction that is grafting homo- or interpolymer onto one or more of the rubber components can advantageously be used to produce all or part of a corresponding ungrafted homo- or interpolymer for the matrix portion. It should be noted that any production of grafted polymer, in most cases, inherently produces small amounts of ungrafted (i.e. matrix) polymer.
Advantageously (1) small emulsion particles and large emulsion particles are grafted at the same time with monovinylidene aromatic and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers and produce, also at the same time, a small amount of ungrafted SAN or SAN-type interpolymer;
(2) the grafting of the mass particles is done with the same or different monovinylidene aromatic and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers in a different, separate process and also produces a portion of the total ungrafted SAN or SAN-type interpolymer desired for the matrix of the final composition; (3) the balance of the ungrafted MSAN-type interpolymer desired as the matrix of the rubber-modified polymer composition hereof is produced separately; and (4) the indicated ingredients are then combined to form the subject polymer compositions. Preferably, the separatel~
. :: . . ..
WO9l/15~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~ 3 ~ '~1 " .
produced MSAN-type interpolymer is produced in a mass or mass-solution type of polymerization process.
In general, the matrix portion of` the present invention comprises: (1) MSAN-type interpolymer; (2) other comonomers interpolymerized into the MSAN-type interpolymer; (3) additional non-elastomeric polymeric material combined therewith; (4) ungrafted, unoccluded polymer produced during the grafting of the emulsion particles; (5) ungrafted, unoccluded polymer produced during the grafting of the mass particles; and/or (6) other filler-type materials. The ~eight average molecular weight (Mw) of all the matrix (ungrafted) polymer, from all sources typically is from 40~000 to at least 300,000, preferably from 70,000 to 200,000. In other words, the Mw's of the ungrafted, unoccluded polymer included in the present rubber-modified polymer compositions, which amounts of polymer: (1) can be produced during the grafting of the emulsion particles;
(2) can be produced during the gra~ting of the mass particles; (3) are the MSAN-type polymer; and/or (4) can be from other sources of ungrafted matrix polymer, will average out to be within the ~esired range.
When the MSAN-type interpolymer and the first and second graft copolymers are blended together as described herein, a rubber-modified, rigid, heat- and impact-resistant polymer composition is formed.
Advantageously, the composition has a Vicat softening 3 point of at least 104C (DIN-B), preferably at least 112C. The impact strength of the compositions of the present invention, as determined by the Charpy method are advantageously at least 7, and preferably is at least 9 kJ/m2. The tensile strength at yield is advantageously at least 50 N~mm2~ and pre~erably is at ;
, . . . . . . . . . ............. ... . .
;'' : : ' ,, . . ' ' ' ' ~ . .
'. : ' " ' .''. ' . ~ ' ' .' `, ` ' ~, WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ -24-le~ast 55 N/mm2. The compositions of the present invention advantageously have an elastic modulus of at least 2400 MPa, and preferably at least 2500 MPa.
It should be noted that the weight percentages of the three polymeric components of the invention, i.e.
the MSAN-type polymer and the first and second graft copolymers, are based upon the total weight of these components.
The present invention is further illustrated by reference to the following specific examples, preparations, and comparative experiments. All parts and percentages are by weight unless otherwise explicitly indicated. Various standard test methods are used to evaluate the physical properties of the various polymer compositions. The notched Izod impact strength values are determined according to IS0 180 4a. Tensile strengths at yield and rupture (Ty and Tr, respectively) and percent elongation are determined according to DIN 53455-6-3. Melt flow rate (MFR) values are determined according to DIN 53735-U. Vicat heat distortion is determined according to DIN 53460, Condition B. The Charpy impact is determined according to DIN 53453. The elastic modulus is determined according to DIN 53457. The Comparative Experiments are not embodiments of the present invention.
Preparation 1 MSAN.1 A mixture of 8 percent N-phenylmaleimide, 52 percent styrene, 20 percent acrylonitrile and 20 percent ethylbenzene is fed to an SAN coil reactor at a temperature between 140 and 146C. In a separate feed stream a solution of a radical-forming organic compollnd WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~:5 ~
is supplied to the reactor. The prepolymer of 40 to 70 percent solids is devolatilized by applying vacuum.
PreDaration 2, MSAN.2 The procedure of Preparation 1 is repeated except that the feed mixture contains 18 percent acrylonitrile, 48 percent styrene, arld 26 percent ethylbenzene, the reactor temperature is from 145 to 152C, and the prepolymer solution contains from 40 to 60 percent solids.
Pre3aration of Mass ABS.3 and .4 A mass particle constituent is prepared by dissolving polybutadiene (BUNA HX529C brand rubber available from Bayer A.G.) in a mixture of styrene, acrylonitrile and ethylbenzene, then polymerizing the monomers while agitating and/or otherwise shearing to achieve the desired rubber particle size. During the polymerization some forming interpolymer is grafted to the rubber while some does not graft but forms matrix interpolymer. In this process, as in all grafting processes, varying amounts of matrix interpolymer can be formed (in addition to the grafted portion) depending on 25 the amounts of monomers supplied. ;~;
Pre~aration of Mass ABS.5 The procedure of the Preparation of Mass ABS.3 and .4 is repeated except that a different polybutadiene (B~NA HX565 brand rubber available from Bayer A.G.) is employed. In addition, the large particles of the bimodal distribution are prepared simultaneously in a - - .. . . . - . .. . , ~ ................ . . . . .
~: , : , .: :. : . . . .:, . , - , , . :- . . .
:. .:. :: ,.. ; :: .. . ... . . . ,.: , ~. . . :.; , ,, . :
. :: : .. . . . . . . ..
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ ç;~ 26-parallel reactor. Preparation of Emulsion ABS.6, .7 and.8 An aqueous latex containing particles of rubber is heated while the graftable monomers (styrene and acrylonitrlle), mercaptan, persulfate initiator, and emulsifying agent are supplied. The latex, contalning the SAN-grafted rubber particles as well as some ungrafted SAN is freeze coagulated, thawed, centrifuged, then air dried to reduce the water content below 1 percent in the resultant powdery polymer composition.
This procedure describes the preparation of monomodal emulsion ABS.7 as well as the preparation of the small particles in bimodal emulsion ABS.6 and bimodal emulsi~n ABS.8.
The bimodal emulsion ABS materials are prepared by adding, prior to the addition of the graftable monomers, about 0.34 weight percent based on the total weight of rubber of an agglomerating agent to the starting aqueous latex of the proceeding paragraph. The agglomerating agent consists of polybutadiene core with a shell of ethylacrylate-methacrylic acid (92/8) copolymer. A portion of particles agglomerate to give a bimodal particle size distribution of large particles and small particles. This latex is then grafted and recovered in the same ~anner described in the proceeding paragraph.
:
Further characteristics of the products of the Preparations are given in Table A.
:
,",.
... , ~ . ~ ; . ;- .. ... : . :.... .. . .
WO91/155~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~ 7 ,~ 3 ~ ~
TABLE A ~ .
_ . . .
MSAN.1 MSAN.2 Mass ABS.3 Mass ABS.4 :
Weight ~ O 0 7.0 12.5 rubber .
5 Rubber type 100 ~ 100 %
butadiene butadiene Dv (microns) 0.65 1.11 Rigid Phase Composition:
~Acrylonitrile 21.5 21.5 24.7 24 10 %Styrene 64.5 64.5 75.3 76 %N-PMI* 14 14 Weight Average 155,000 95,000 185,000 166,000 Molecular Weight Mass Emulsion Emulsion Emulsion ABS.5 ABS.6 ABS.7 ABS.8 .
Weight % 15 52.5 55 47 rubber Rubber type 100 % 100 % 93:7 93:7 .
butadiene butadiene butadiene /styrene Dv (microns) BIMODAL BIMODAL 0.15 BIMODAL
0.6 0.07 0.15 1.2 0.50 0.55 Rigid Phase Composition:
25 %Acrylonitrile 24 29.5 29.5 29.5 %Styrene 76 70.5 70.5 70.5 %N~PMI*
Weight Average 163,000 125,000 125,000 125,000 Molecular 3 Weight ` N-Phenylmaleimide ,'.
..
~ . . . . , ~ . ~ .
~ . , , . :, .. ... - -,- , . - ~ - . . . ~
.. .. . .. . . . .~ . . . .. . . . . .
WO91/155~ PCT/USsl/0~276 ~ ~ -28-Example 1 A mixture of 20 parts ~mulsion ABS.6, 20 parts Mass ABS.3, and 60 parts MSAN.l are dry blended. The resulting blend is then compounded into a homogeneous melt on a compounder and is extruded into strands which are then pelletized. The pellets are injection molded into standard test bars having the blended composition.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table l.
Example 2 .
The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using 15 parts Emulsion ABS.6, 50 parts Mass ABS.39 and 35 parts MSAN.l. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table l.
.
; .. , , ~.. , .. ~ - . , ; . :, ,: : . . -WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~
TABLE 1 ~
: .
Example 1 Example 2 Emulsion ABS.6 20 15 Mass ABS.3 20 50 MSAN.t 60 35 ~:
% Emulsion rubber 10.4 7.8 % Mass rubber 1.4 3.5 Total rubber content 11.8 11.3 Mass~Total rubber ratio 0.12 0.31 i :, Ty (N/mm2) 55.2 56.0 Tr (N/mm2~ ~ 43.4 43.8~ ~ ;
Elongation (%) : 25 18: :
E-Mod (MPa) : 2600 2520 Vicat (C) 113.0 108.9 : -:
Charpy (KJ/m2) ~ 9.2 10.5 : .
Izod (J~m) 119 147 ~ ..
MFR (g/(10 min.)) 4.4 5.4 : ~:
' ' ' , 34 ~
WO91/1~ PCT/US91tO2276 ~ -30-?3~3 ExamDles 3-5 and Comparative Experiments 6-7 The pro~edure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 2. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 2.
Ex.3 Ex~4 E~.5 C.E.5 C.E.7 Emulsion ABS.6 15 23 17 16.4 20 Mass ABS.3 35 17 23 7.1 MSAN.1 50 60 60 76.5 80 % Emulsion 7.8 11.96 8.84 8.5 10.4 rubber % Mass 2.45 1.19 1.61 0.5 Rubber Total rubber Content 10.25 13.15 10.45 9.0 10.4 Mass/Total rubber 0.24 0.09 0.15 0.06 ratio Vicat (C) 112 114 115 118 118 Charpy 8.4 9.9 7.8 4.2 4.2 (kJ/m2) Izod (J/m) 109 130 85 59 58 Ty (N~mm2) 57.6 53.9 58.1 62.4 59.6 Tr (N/mm2) 45.7 43.0 46.4 53.9 51.5 Elongation 18 22 19 13 17 (%) E-Mod (MPa) 2665 2445 2590 2815 2725 MFR
g/(10 min.) 5.7 4.6 5.0 4.6 4.1 .. . .
WV91/1~ PCT/US9l/~2~76 ~31- 2~ 3 f The compositions of Examples 3-5 exhibit high heat properties as well as unexpectedly high tensile strengths. Comparative Example 6 is outside the desired range of the mass rubber/total rubber ratio and consequently has an unacceptably low impact value.
Comparative Experiment 7 contains no mass ABS and possesses a Charpy value of 4.2, which is too low, despite the fact that the total rubber level is comparable with that of Example 5.
Examples 8-12 and Comparative ExPeriments 13-14 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using 15 the blend components in amounts as specified in Table : .
3. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 3.
' Wo 91/15544 ~ P~/US9ltO2276 q ~ ?~f 'b' -:
o rr 0 u~
~ L5~ ~ ~) ~ 0 5 ~ ~ N =
C ) ~ I U~ ~1 I N I O N J ~ J
.
C~
. ~ ~ ~o ~ L~ ~ ~ ~
~s~ O O O O :3- ~ C; 3 ~ t- :J C; 0 C~ O
O N ~0 N '-- -- O ' - t~l LS ~ ~ --,_ ~ cr~
~ .
, .
_ ~ u~ r- a ~~ o~ o~
. . . .
X O O O U~ O O ~ ~ U~ ~ t--L~ ~ Ln ~ -- O IS~ a .
' .
_ ~ L~ 3 0 ~ N N =r ~ ~ t--. . . .
X U~ Ln O ~ N O O N 0 0~ Ln e-- 1~\ 0 Li~
r~~ _ ~ Ln -- -- o ~ ~
~ N
m E~o ~o ~o 0 Cl:~ N 0 L~ 0 ~ O ~ . . . .
x If\ O Ln ~ ~I O O C~ O ~ t~
:J -- N Ln ~t -- `-- :
. : ~
:::
O' S -- ~ m ~ N ~D
X O O O O N N O N 0~ 0 11~ 1' -- O
t~ N tYl L~ ~-- ~ -- N ii~ 3 N 11 N
.
0 =r If ~ N ~0 ~ S 0 X Ll~ U~ O ~ ~ O t-- N ~r) ~ ~ O' O~ L~l s r~7 ~ _ o ~ Lr t~
O ~ . ~
N N
C C
O O
U~ Z ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Z C ~:: O '' ~ u~ C 3 ~ a O ~ O O ~ -E ~ ~ EO :~ ~ o ~ ~ N k, ¢ ~ ¢ ~ ~ ~ L ~
, , '': . ~ . ~' ', ',' ,: , ' WO91/155~ P~T/US91/02276 ~23 7 ~;~ `3 .~ 7 Examples 8-12 are embodiments of the invention exhibiting high Vicat softening temperatures with unexpectedly high tensile properties. Comparative Example 13 contains 14.6 percent rubber which is above the upper limit for the rubber level as specified in this invention. Consequently, although the impact is high, the Young's Modulus is too low. Comparative Experiment 14, which is outside the scope of the invention since it has no mass ARS and too much rubber, possesses a very low modulus.
Example 15 and comParative Experiments 16-18 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 4.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 4.
~ ~ ~ ', ' ", WO 91/15~44 PCI/US91/02276 ~;~r~ ,3 ~ 1 - 3 4 -O _r 0 ~i L~ L~ O .` - ~D Ln Ln r- a; O o I L~ o L~ _r ~-~O
N
,_ ~J _r r.~
X Ln Ln o _r N oo c~ ~n ~- L~ oo Ln L~ ,- ~o Ln i ~- o ln _r ~- UD
N : :
. Ln ~ co ~
C~ Ln O Ln o~ O ~D _r N ~o a~ ~- Ln ~r I =r -- ~- ~ L~ 3 N : :
O Ln : :
,_ _r oo Ln 0 ~-X L~ o Ln N o oo O L~ n c~ Ln ~r ~ ~- _r _r I ~- N ln 3 '~
~1 m .;
¢ ~D
oo ~ ~ o~ o O O O N N ln c~ ~o ~ c~ ~o ~ N N I ~ -- Ln 3 0 In c~ - =r X O O O O N r~ ~ c~ 3 uO '- Ln N ~ -- c~ Ln _r -- ~-,_ Ln . ..
n N 3 N =r X o o o o~ oO c~ cn _r L~ ~ Ln o N N ~ I ~L~ _r ~ o N
~ .
~ N
Vl ~D ~
. v~ ~ Z X ~ ~ ~ ~ :: O O
~¢ ~ I C~ ~ O ¢: O~
E ct:l ~ OQ u7 u~ 3 o Ci :~: C ~ ~ ~ '- i~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ' ' WO91/lS~ PCT~VSgl/02~76 ~7~?7 In Table 4, Mw indicates weight average molecular weight of the MSAN component~s) o~ the blend.
The data in Table 4 demonstrate the effect of the molecular weight of the MSAN with regard to the retention of reasonable (i.e. Charpy >7) impact performance at equivalent tensile properties. For Comparative Experiments 16, 17 and 18, although the rubber levels and ratio of mass-to-total rubber are within the claimed ranges, the MSAN molecular weight of 92,000 is too low to give compositions with desirable impact properties.
Examples 20-23 and Comparative Experiment 19 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 5.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 5.
. .
: : .
WO9~ PCT/US91/02~76 e~ TABLE 5 C.E.19 Ex.20 Ex.21 Ex.Z2 Ex.23 Emulsion ABS.6 20 - 13.4 - 13 Emulsion ABS.7 - 20 Emulsion ABS.8 - - - 15 Mass ABS.3 - 35 - 50 49 Mass ABS.4 45 Mass ABS.5 ~ - 40.6 - - -MSAN.1 - 45 46.0 35 35 MSAN.2 35 M~S - - - - 3 Vicat (C) 104 111 110 110 110 Charpy (kJ/m2) 13.1 13.3 10.3 9.6 9.3 Izod (J/m) 202 203 167 136 156 MFR (DIN) (g/10 min.) 10.15 3.2 n.m. 4.6 n.m.
Ty (N/mm2) 43.5 52.7 50.0 56.6 53.5 Tr (N/mm2) 35.5 41.1 40.7 43.8 41.7 Elongation (%) 29 21 38 22 16 E-Mod. (MPa) 2200 2410 2460 2590 2410 n m. - not measured The grade of methacrylate-butadiene-styrene (referred to as "MBS" in Table 5) rubber used is Paraplex 3607 from the Rohm and Haas Company.
(Paraplex is a trademark of the Rohm and Haas Company).
In the Examples summarized in Tables 1-4, the .. .. . .
emulsion ingredient in the blend system has rubber particles made from essentially 100% butadiene.
However, as is illustrated by Examples 20 and 22, emulsion rubber particles consisting of 93 percent ., - ~
' ; : ' .
, .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~7~3~7 butadiene with 7 percent styrene are within the scope of the invention. The use of monomodal emulsion ABS
is also shown in Example 20. The use of bimodal mass ABS is shown in Example 21. Alternative impact modification packages, such as mixtures of emulsion ABS with MBS are shown in Example 23 to give blends with properties in the desired ranges. However, for a monomodal mass ABS component, a rubber particle size of I.ll micron was found to be above the upper limit for maintaining good tensile properties as is illustrated by Comparative Experiment 19.
. :
` -.. :: ~ .. ,. , . . ;.. . : ., . .. . . .. : . ,:
. . . .: . . , . . . : . . . .
- . . . .. . . ., . i ~, . . . .... . .. . .. .
TENSILE PROPERTIES
The present invention pertains to certainrubber-modified monovinylidene aromatic polymer compositions which exhibit a beneficial combination of physicl characteristics.
It is well known in the art that various relatively rigid and/or brittle interpolymers of monvinylidene aromatic monomers with ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers can be made more impact resstant by the inclusion of amounts of various types of elastomeric materials, such as various rubbers, into a matrix or continuous phase of said interpolymers. The elastomeric materials usually are in the form of discrete particles, such partlcles havig amounts of the matrix interpolymer. or an inter- or homopolymer similar thereto, graft-polymerized thereto. These types of rubber-modified, impact-resistant polmeric compositions are commonly known and referred to as graft copolymers or polyblends. Among the bestknown of these types of compositions are the ABS or ABS-type compositions.
Compositionally, ABS or ABS-type compositions generally comprise a combination of an elastomer, usually containing polymerized butadiene, with a rigid "'' -. , .. , . ~ . .. ... . ... , . - . . - - . .. . ,. .: :, .. . .. .
W091/1~5~ PCT/VS91/02276 2 ~r~ ;~ z interpolymer of a monovinylidene aromatic monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer.
Structurally, ABS or ABS-type compositions usually consist of the rigid, matrix or continuous phase having dispersed therein particles of the elastomer, such particles usually having grafted thereto amounts of the rigid interpolymer or a similar inter- or homopolymer.
It is also well ~nown in the art that the physical properties of these t~pes of compositions are greatly affected by the relative amounts of elastomer particles havin~ different sizes and particle structures, as well as the structures of the individual rubber particles (i.e., rubber particle morphology).
There are well-known advantages and disadvantages accompanying the use of either of the two main rubber-particle types in rubber-modified polymer compositions. It is generally believed that grafted rubber particles containing occlusions of matrix polymer therein, this being one of the two main rubber-particle types, provide more impact resistance than the same amount of rubber in the form of similarly grafted, solid rubber particles. the latter being the other main particle type. The grafted, occlusion-containing rubber particles are usually formed and grafted in a mass-type or mass-suspension-type polymerization process where a previously-produced rubber is dissolved in one or more polymerizable monomers with op'ional diluents, which monomers are thereafter polymerized. Occlusion--containing particles, produced in such mass, mass-solution or mass-suspension processes or variations of these processes are hereafter referred to as "mass particles." It is difficult. however, using available types of rubber and mass procecs equipment to produce WO91/15~ 7 !J ~6 ~ ~
groups of mass particles having volume average diameters less than 0.5~.
The other main type of rubber particle morphology (i.e., the above-mentioned "solid" or non-occluded grafted rubber particle) is usually achieved via emulsion polymerization of the rubber in the form of an aqueous latex. After the rubber is made, monomers which are polymerizable and graftable (e.g., styrene and acrylonitrile) are usually added to the rubber-containing latex and polymerized to form the graft portion as well as amounts of matrix polymer. The non-occluded type of rubber particles, produced via an emulsion polymerization process, are hereinafter referred to as "emulsion particles." When these emulsion particles have been grafted with a different, relatively rigid polymer, but still have a high rubber concentration, at least about 30 weight percent or so, these compositions are very suitable for blending with additional amounts of the same or different rigid polymer, optionally containing additional amounts of rubber, to achieve desired rubber contents in the resultant compositions. Such blendable intermediates are often referred to as "grafted rubben concentrates"
and can be used to produce a wide variety of rubber--modified polymer compositions.
It is further known that the heat distortion temperature or softening point of ABS or ABS-type composition can be raised by incorporating into the compositions materials such as N-phenylmaleimide, o-methyl styrene, and copolvmers of styrene with maleic anhydride. However, the incorporation of these materials into A3S or ABS-type compositions usually is accompanied by some decrease in other physical - : : . .: ,. ~ .. . .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ -4-properties. For example, the use of styrene-maleic anhydride can result in uncontrolled cross-linking at temperatures greater than 230C, resulting in unpredictable decreases in impact and melt flow rate properties. Similarly. the use of Q-methyl styrene as a comonomer can result in a composition which is difficult to process. Specifically, the use of a-methyl styrene can lower the ceiling temperature of the resulting composition, the result being depolymerization and reduced physical properties. Accordingly, the use of certain materials may improve the heat distortion temperature of an ABS or ABS-type composition, but generally at the expense of other physical properties.
Thus, a long-standing problem is the production of an ABS or ABS-type composition having a high heat distortion temperature while also exhibiting impact and tensile strength properties.
U.S. Patent 4,567,233 discloses a rubber--modified styrenic resin composition comprising up to four components. One component is a graft copolymer comprising a specific matrix resin and emulsion rubber particle having an average particle size of from 0.1 to 0.5~. Another component is a graft copolymer comprising a specific matrix resin and a mass or mass-suspension rubber particle having an average particle size of from ~.7 to 4~. The amount of the small particle component must be from 50 to 97 percent of the total weight of the two rubber-containing components. A third component includes a copolymer of a vinyl aromatic compound, a maleimide compound, and optionally a copolymerizable vinyl compound. An optional fourth component is a polymer of a vinyl aromatic compound and an unsaturated nitrile compound. Said patent discloses that such . .... .. , ~ . . . . ..
WO91/155~ 2 ~ ~ $ 3 ~ J PCT/~S91/~2276 compositions have good heat stability and falling dart impact properties. However, the problem o~ tensile strength is not discussed.
It is known that the use of small rubber particles improves tensile properties ~or a given rubber content, but sacri~ices impact properties. Further, the use of emulsion particles, which generally are smaller, results in degradation of thermal properties, especially the Vicat softening point, compared to the use of mass particles. This is because higher rubber levels are required in an emulsion ABS to attain a given impact ~, value. The Vicat softening point temperature is further reduced by the presence of residuals from the emulsion process. Thus, while the use of emulsion particles in ABS and ABS-type polymers is common for the improvernent ,, of certain properties, such use is detrimental to the thermal and tensile strength properties of these resins.
Since the foregoing problem is fairly commonly encountered within the plastics molding industry, it would be highly desirable if there could be provided rubber-modified molding compositions having excellent tensile,properties and, particularly. if such could be accomplished without attendant sacrifices in other important properties such as impact strength and heat resistance.
It has now been discovered that certain rubber--modi~ied monovinylidene aromatic polymer compositions can be provided having very high tensile properties while still maintaining a desirable co~bination o~ heat resistance and impact strength by proper and careful control and selection of several key parameters and crit~rion. In part1cula~. it has been ~ound that in WOgl/15~W ~ PCT/US91/OZ~76 ~ -6-order to suitably accomplish the foregoing, one must utilize the following within the context of the present composition: a mass rubber to total rubber weight ratio of from 0.09 to 0.4; said mass rubber ingredient having an average particle size of less than one micron; as part of the composition a copolymer having a weight average molecular weight of at least 120,000, said copolymer being polymerized from a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and a maleimide monomer; and a total rubber content within such composition of from 8.5 to l3.5 weight percent on a total composition weight basis.
Accordingly, the present invention is an improved rubber-modified, rigid, heat-and impact-resistant polymeric blend composition comprising:
(1) from 7 to 76 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of an interpolymer of a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, a maleimide monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer;
(2) from 7 to 25 weight percent~ based on the rubber-modified composition, of a first graft copolymer composition, prepared by an emulsion process: and (3) from 17 to 85 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a second graft copolymer composition prepared by a mass type process wherein (a) the weight average molecular weight of the interpolymer is at least l20.000, :
WO 91/lg~44 2 ~ 7 ~q 3 3 7cr/US9l/02~76 (b) the first graft copolymer composition comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of a copolymer (A) grafted at least in part to from 30 to 70 weight percent o~ an emulsion rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65 micron, (c) the said copolymer (A) comprises in polymerized form from 10 to 60 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (d) the second graft copolymer composition comprises a copolymer (B) grafted at least in part to a mass rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of less than one micron, (e) copolymer (B) comprises in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsatuated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (f) the total rubber content of the said rubber-modified composition comprises from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and (g) the weight ratio of rubber particles prepared by mass polymerization to the total rubber 3 content of the rubber-modified composition is from 0.09 to 0.4.
Tensile strength is an important physical property for end uses such as automotive interior trim, lighting, cowl vents, air-directing grills, and other ., .-- .. ., .. - - . - . . - . . . . .
.-;. . :~ .-- . . :, . . : .
: :. . `.. , . . : . ., . .: . . , . ` ~ : .. ,,: , :, :: . ... . . ~ .: . . : , : :, .: ~ : ' ',: ' ': ' ': ',-' , :, ' ' .-: ' ` ' ' : :' .: ~ : ' ~ ,.
WO91/155~ ~ ~3~ PCT/US91tO2~76 ~J~ - 8-.. ~
applications which require molded parts with the ability to bear loads and to withstand the forces associated with mechanical fastening. The compositions of the present invention are well-suited for such applications in view of the combination of tensile strength, heat resistance, and impact strength exhibited by these compositions.
The present invention comprises three essential elements: (a) a monovinylidene aromatic / maleimide /
ethylenically unsaturated nitrile interpolymer; (b) a first graft copolymer containing emulsion particles (rubber) dispersed therein; an~ (c) a second graft copolymer containing mass particles (rubber) dispersed therein. It should be noted that as used herein the terms "polymer" and "polymerization" are generic, and can include the more specific cases of "homo , co- and interpolymer" and "homo-, co- and interpolymerization,"
respectively.
The first of the three above-mentioned essential elements of the present invention comprises an interpolymer having polymerized therein maleimide monomer, monovinylidene aromatic monomer and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer. For the purposes of the present invention, these interpolymers are hereinafter referred to as "MSAN-type" since the most common example of these polymers is prepared from a maleimide monomer. styrene, and acrylonitrile. The 3 MSAN-type interpolymer preferably is formed from 15 to 43 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer, 14 to 75 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer, and 8 to 50 weight percent of maleimide monomer. The weight average molecular weight of the MSAN-type polymer advantageously is at least WO91/155~ PCT/US91/02t76 _g_ 2~ ~()3r~7l 120,000 and preferably is at least 150.000. Preferably, the composition of the present invention comprises from 7 to 76 weight percent of the MSAN-type polymer.
Examples of the monovinylidene aromatic monomers which, in polymerized form~ may be included in compositions according to the present invention are styrene; alpha-alkyl monovinylidene aromatic monomers including e.g., alpha-methylstyrene, alpha-ethylstyrene, alpha-methylvinyltoluene, alpha-methyl dialkylstyrenes, etc.; ring substituted alkyl styrenes (including e.g., ortho-, meta-, and paravinyl toluene; o-ethylstyrene;
p-ethylstyrene; 2,4-dimethylstyrene; p-tertiarybutyl styrene; etc.); ring-substituted halostyrenes including e.g., o-chlorostyrene, p-chlorostyrene. o-bromostyrene, 2,4-dichlorostyrene, etc.; ring-alkyl, ring--halosubstituted styrenes including e.g., 2-chloro-4--methylstyrene, 2,6-dichloro-4-methylstyrene, etc.;
vinyl naphthalene; vinyl anthracene, and the like. The alkyl substituents generally have 1 to 4 carbon atoms and may include isopropyl and isobutyl groups. If so desired, mixtures of such monovinylidene aromatic monomers may be employed. Typically, the monovinylidene aromatic monomer will constitu~e from 14 to about 75, preferably from 50 to 70, weight percent of the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Maleimide monomers suitably employed in the present invention include maleimide. N-alkylmaleimide 3 and N-arylimaleimide compounds. In the N-aryl maleimides, which are preferred, the aryl substituent may have one or more of the atoms replaced by other inert moieties such as halo or Lower alkyl. Suitable N-aryl maleimides are disclosed in U.S. Patent 3,652,726. The aryl groups that may be present in the . ..
WO91/15~ PCTlUS91/02276 N-aryl maleimides include, for example, phenyl, ~--diphenyl, 1-naphthyl, all the mono- and di-methylphenyl isomers, 2,6-diethylphenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-chlorophenyl, 4-bromophenyl and other mono- and di-halophenyl isomers, 2,4,6-trichlorophenyl. 214,6-tribromophenyl, 4-n--butylphenyl, 2-methyl-4-n-butylphenyl, Ll-benzylphenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-methoxyphenyl, 2-methoxy-5-chlorophenyl, 2-methoxy-5-bromophenyl, 2,5-dimethoxy-4-chlorophenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-ethoxyphenyl, 2,5-diethoxyphenyl, 4-phenoxyphenyl, 4-methoxycarbonylphenyl, 4-cyanophenyl, 2-, 3- and 4-nitrophenyl and methyl-chlorophenyl (2,3-, 2,4-, 2,5- and 4,3-isomers). A preferred N-aryl maleimide monomer is N-phenylmaleimide. Mixtures of maleimide monomers may be employed. Suitably, the maleimide monomer is from 8 to 50, preferably from 8 to 36, weight percent of the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Exemplary of the unsaturated nitrile monomers which may be included are acrylonitrile, methacrylonitrilet ethacrylonitrile, and mixtures thereof. The unsaturated nitrile is generally employed in the MSAN-type interpolymer in an amount of from 15 to 43, preferably from 20 to 25 ~leight percent based on the total weight of maleimide monomer, monovinylidene aromatic monomer and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer employed in preparing the MSAN-type interpolymer containing those three monomers.
In addi~ion to maleimide monomers, mono-3 -vinylidene aromatic monomers and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers, various additional monomers may be desirably included, in polymerized form, in the rubber-modified polymer compositions according to the present invention. Exemplary of such additional monomers are conjugated 1,3 dienes (e.g., butadiene, 5~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ ~ 7 ~ 3 ?,,~ ~
isoprene, etc.); alpha- or beta-unsaturated monobasic acids and derivatives thereof (e.g., acrylic acid, methylacrylate, ethylacrylate, butyl acrylate, 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, methacrylic acid and the correspondin~ esters thereof such as methyl methacrylate, etc., acrylamide, methacrylamide and the like); vinyl halides such as vinyl chloride, vinyl bromide, etc.; vinylidene chloride, vinylidene bromide, etc.; vinyl esters such as vinyl acetate, vinyl propionate~ etc.; dialkyl maleates or fumarates such as dimethyl maleate, diethyl maleate, dibutyl maleate, the corresponding fumarates, etc. Preferred examples of these additional monomers include C1_4 alkyl methacrylates, including mixtures thereof. As is known in the art 9 the amount of these monomers which may be included will vary as the result of various factors.
The amount of such monomers employed will generally be less than 10 weight percent based on the total weight of the monomers employed in preparing the non-rubber, polymeric portions of the rubber-reinforced product of the invention.
The various additional monomers can be incorporated into compositions according to the present invention in any or all of several ways. For example, one or more of the additional monomers may be interpolymerized into the MSAN-type interpolymer.
Additionally, one or more of the additional monomers can be graft polymerized onto, and in the case of mass particles, polymerized and occluded within the rubber particles. In addition, one or more of the additional monomers can be otherwise polymerized into polymeric components which can be comblned e,g., blended, into .
.
q ~S 3 PCT/US91/02276 rubber-modified polymer compositions according to the present invention.
The first graft copolymer comprises at least one type of rubber particle. produced in an emulsion polymerization process, the particle beincr grafted with an SAN or SAN-type interpolymer comprising polymerized therein from 10 to 60 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer.
0 Advantageously, the composition of the present invention comprises from 7 to 25 weight percent of the first graft copolymer. Certain preferred compositions of the invention comprise a greater amount of the second graft copolymer than the first graft copoly~er. For example one preferred embodiment of the invention employs 49 percent or less of the first graft copolymer based upon the total weight of the first and second graft copolymer. The emulsion rubber particle can have a monomodal, but preferably has a bimodal, particle size distribution. Thus, the first graft copolymer may contain emulsion particles having different morphologies. The first graft copoly~er advantageously comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of the SAN or SAN-type interpolymer and from 30 to 70 weight percent emulsion rubber particle. Preferably, the first graft copolymer comprises from 35 to 55 weight percent emulsion rubber particle. Preferably, the emulsion rubber particle comprises polybutadiene rubber. The first graft copolymer preferably has a rubber particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65~.
Various substrate rubbers (onto which the superstrate polymer may be grafted during polymerization in the presence of such rubber ) are utilizable as the : , . : , ~ :
' ~
WO91/155~ PCT/~91/02276 ~ 33 ~
emulsion particles. These rubbers include diene rubbers, ethylene propylene rubbers, ethylene propylene diene (EPDM) rubbers, acrylate rubbers, polyisoprene rubbers, halogen-containing rubbers and mixtures thereof as well as interpolymers of rubber-forming monomers with other copolymerizable monomers. The preferred rubbers for use in preparing said emulsion particles are diene rubbers or mixtures of diene rubbers, i.e.? any rubbery polymers (a polymer having a second order glass transition temperature not higher than 0C, preferably not hi~her than -20C~ as determined by ASTM Method Test D-746-52T) of one or more conjugated 1,3-dienes. e.g., butadiene, isoprene, piperylene, chloroprene, etc. Such rubbers include homopolymers and interpolymers of conjugated 1,3-dienes with up to an equal amount by weight of one or more copolymerizable monoethylenically unsaturated monomers, such as monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., styrene; a ring-substituted alkylstyrene 9 such as o-, m-, and p-vinyl toluene or 2,4-dimethylstyrene, the ring-substituted ethylstyrenes, p-tert-butylstyrene, etc.; an alpha-alkylstyrene, such as alpha-methylstyrene, alpha-ethylstyrene, alpha--methyl-p-methylstyrene, etc.; vinyl naphthalene, etc.);
ring-substituted halo monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g.. the o-, m-. and p-chlorostyrenes, 2,4-dibromostyrene, 2-methyl-4-chlorostyrene, etc.);
acrylonitrile; methacrylonitrile: alkyl acrylates (e.g., methyl acrylate, butyl acrylate. 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, etc.); the corresponding alkyl methacrylates;
acryla~ides (e.g., acrylamide, methacrylamide, N-butyl acrylamide, etc.); unsaturated ketones (e.g.. methyl vinyl ketone, methyl isopropenyl ketone, etc.); alpha--olefins (e.g., ethylene, propylene, etc.); pyridines;
vinyl esters (e.g., vinyl acetate, vinyl stearate, , .
WO91/15~ ~I PCT/US91/02276 ~? '3 _ 1 Ll_ etc.); vinyl and vinylidene halides (e.g., the vinyl and vinylidene chlorides and bromides, etc.); and the like.
A preferred group of rubbers for use as the emulsion rubber particles are those consisting essentially of 70 to 100 percent by weight of butadiene and/or isoprene and up to 30 percent by weight of monomers selected from the group consisting of monovinylidene aromatic hydrocarbons (e.g., styrene) and unsaturated nitriles (e.g., acrylonitrile) or mixtures thereof. Particularly advantageous emulsion rubbery polymer substrates are butadiene homopolymer or an interpolymer of 90 to 99 percent by weight butadiene and 1 to 10 percent by weight of acrylonitrile and/or styrene.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention in which the first graft copolymer contains bimodal emulsion particles, one of the rubber components hereinafter referred to as the small particle component, has a relatively small average particle size, the particles thereof advantageously having a volume average particle diameter of from 0.05 to 0.25~ and preferably a number average particle diameter of from 0.013 to 0.17~.
As discussed above, these small-sized particles are most conveniently prepared by emulsion polymerizing a mixture of rubber-forming monomers to form a dispersion of uniformly sized particles of the desired size, as is well known in the art. See, for example, ~.S. Patents 30 3,509,237; 3,928.494; 4,243,769; and 4,250,271 which teach suitable processés. It has been found that this component preferably has a volume average particle diameter of from 0.08 to 0.20~. preferably with a number average particle diameter of from 0.02 to 0.13~. -Another rubber component to be included in this -: . . . . .
, . ~ , :: ,:: .. ,: : . . : ~
WO91/15~ s~ S91/0Z276 preferred rubber-modified composition is referred to as the large emulsion particle component. This component has a volume average particle diameter of from 0.35 to 0.651u, preferably from 0.4 to 0.6,u. Since most emulsion polymerization processes do not inherently produce particles in the aforementioned large emulsion particle size range, the particles of this component can be produced by agglomerating or coagulating emulsion--produced dispersions of smaller rubber particles, either before, during or after the particles are grafted. See, for example, U.S. Patents 3,~51,370;
3,666,704; 3,956,218; and 3,825,621 which teach suitable processes. A particularly desirable technique for the controlled agglomeration of the particles of an emulsion-prepared rubber in an aqueous dispersion is taught in U.S~ Patent 4,419,496 entitled "Particle Agglomeration in Rubber Latices" by D. E. Henton and T. M. O'Brien.
The aforementioned small and large emulsion rubber particles advantageously are employed ir a weight ratio range of the former to the latter of from 0.33 to 4, and preferably from 0.4 to l. As discussed above, within the ranges of particle types and amounts specified for the emulsion component, the use of the relatively larger particles in this component and/or the use of larger percentages of this component will usually result in better impact-resistance in the resultant polymer composition.
The e~ulsion particle component advantageously makes up from 60 to 91 weight percent of the rubber in the present invention. However, it is preferred to employ from 60 to 88 weight percent, while from 60 to 70 weight percent is especially preferable. Within these .', : ' ' ' , :`'-.' ',. ';:' ' , " " . ' "' ., '.: .: '.: '-.. ' '.': `' ': '' ,' ,.' ' : ' " ' :
~ " '' '' ' ', ' ' ;' ':, ' . ~, '. ,' ,' ` ' . ','. ' ~ , , ' ' ' ., ' .' : ,: :, : ' . ' WO91/15~ ~ PCT/US91/02276 ranges, the amount of emulsion particle rubber helps to control the tensile properties of the resultant polymeric composition. At constant rubber content, increasing the`amoùnt of emulsion particle rubber increases the tensile properties. Reducin~ the percentage of emulsion particle rubber will generally produce tougher resultant compositions with the loss of some tensile properties.
The second graft copolymer comprises at least one type of rubber particle produced in a mass or mass-suspension polymerization process, the particle being grafted with an SAN or SAN-type interpolymer comprising polymerized therein from 15 to 36 weight percent of ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of monovinylidene aromatic monomer.
Advantageously, the composition of the present invention comprises from 17 to 85 weight percent of the second graft copolymer. The mass rubber particle can have a polymodal particle size distribution, such as a bimodal distribution, but preferably has a monomodal particle size distribution. Advantageously, the mass rubber particle has a volume average particle diameter of less than 1~.
The rubber substrate used for the second graft copolymer advantageously is a diene homopolymer material, such as poly(1,3-butadiene), or a block or random copolymer of at least 30, more preferably from 50 3 to 85, weight percent, 1,3-butadiene and up to about 70, more preferably from about 15 to 50, weight percent, of a monovinylidene aromatic compound, preferably styrene.
This rubber substrate will, here again, typically have a second order glass transition temperature of 0C or less, preferably -20C or less. Preferred rubbers for :. . . : : . . . .
. . . : . . . .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/~2276 use as the mass rubber particles are ho~opolymers o~
butadiene.
The mass particle advantageous~y has a volume average particle diameter of less than 1~, preferably from 0.15 to 0.95~, and a number average particle diameter of from 0.1 to 0.45~. More preferably, the volume average diameter of the particles of this component is from 0.4 to 0.9~ and the number average diameter thereof is from about 0.2 to about 0.4~. Most preferably, the volume average particle size is from 0.4 to 0.69. The mass particle component advantageously makes up from 9 to 40 weight percent of the total rubber in the composition of the present invention, preferably from 12 to 40, and most preferably from 30 to 40 weight percent thereof. Particles sizes are measured using a commercially available Coulter Counter, by visual phase contrast microscopy or electron microscopy techniques supplemented according to methods well known in the art.
It is generally preferred that the second graft copolymer have a total rubber content of 20 weight percent or less of the total weight of said graft -copolymer, the remainder being an SAN or SAN-type -interpolymer. Preferred second graft copolymers thus typically have a rubber content, on the basis of that graft copolymer per se, in the range of from 0.75 to 15, especially ~rom 4 to 9, weight percent.
Within the above-described ranges, the use of this mass rubber particle component imparts desirable levels of impact-resistance to the resultant polymer compositions without adversely affecting the tensile properties to an expected and unacceptable degree. In fact, compositions accordlng to the present invention .
~''' .', " ' . . '. .' '. . . ', '', ' ' ,' . . '., ' ' ,. - . '.' " : ' ' ' "; .' '' ' ' ' ' , ,', " ' ' ., . '~', ',' . , ' ' . " ' " , ., ~ .. ~ , . . , ,,: , . . . .. . ....
. .. ,, : . ,. . ., ,., ~, . ~ ... . ... .. ..
WO91/15~ ' PCT/US91/02276 exhibit an excellent combination of Vicat, tensile, and impact-resistance for the sizes of the particles and the amount of rubber they contain. The use of the indicated amounts of the indicated mass rubber particles thus provides rubber-modified molding compositlons having very high tensile characteristics while still providing desirable levels of impact resistance and Vicat heat resistance.
It has been found most desirable for the second graft copolymer to use particles resulting from a mass--type or mass-suspension-type grafting process which produces particles having grafted thereto and occluded therein amounts of a desired superstrate polymer, preferably an SAN or SAN-type polymer. Such mass processes, as is well known in the art, can be very satisfactorily employed to produce rubber particles having appropriate sizes for utilization in this component. See, for example, U.S. Patents 3,509,237 and 4,239,863 which teach suitable processes.
In general, in compositions according to the present invention, there will be dispersed therein in the form of particles, a total of from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent rubber, based on the total rubber--modified polymer composition weight. If larger rubber contents are employed, then tensile properties and the Vicat heat distortion temperature generally will be reduced. Preferably, the rubber-modified compositions 3 hereof contain a total of from 10 to 13.5 weight percent of dispersed rubbery polymer on a total composition weight basis. Preferably, the weight ratio of mass rubber to total rubber in the composition is from 0.09 W091/15~ PCT/US91/~2276 2 ~ rl~ g ~
to 0.4. More preferably, this ratio is from 0.12 to 0.4, and most preferably from 0.3 to 0.4.
One important criterion of the present invention is that the particulate rubber dispersed in the polymeric matrix comprises at least two different components. It is generally preferred that the dispersed particulate rubber consist essentially of said particulate components. By the term "rubber particle component" is meant a group of rubber particles of the same rubber particle type and having about the same particle size. The two main rubber particle types are (1) the occluded particles made in a mass-type process and (2) the solid, non-occluded particles made in an emulsion polymerization process. Each rubber component can then be characterized by the combination of the average size of the particles and the process by which they are formed. The average particle size of a rubber particle component, as used herein, will, unless otherwise specified, refer to the volume average diameter of the group of particles making up the rubber component of p~article type. In most cases, the volume average diameter of a group of particles is the same as the weight average. In the case of the emulsion-2S -produced rubber particles, the average particle diameter measurement is typically made before any of the polymer is grafted thereto, while in the case of the mass particles, the size generally includes the polymer 3Q grafted to the rubber particles and occlusions of polymer within the partlcles. The volume average diameters of emulsion particle groups having average particle diameters of less than about one micron can be conveniently determined, as can the number average diameters and the particle size distribution, by '' .
. . - . ~ ,.
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ 20-hydrodynamic chromatography (HDC). Hydrodynamic chromatography is explained in U.S. Patent No.
3,865,717, and is also discussed in the Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, V. 89, No. l, pp. 94-106 (lg82). In the case of groups of mass particles and groups of emulsion particles having average particle diameters of more than about one micron, the volume average diameters, number average diameters and particle size distributions can be determined by the analysis of transmission electron micrographs of the compositions containing the particles according to methods well known in the art.
It is recognized, of course, that the various rubber particle components comprise particles having a range of sizes; the above analytical techniques indicate, however, that the particles of a particular rubber particle component generally have a fairly narrow range of particle sizes. By this it is meant that the ratio of the volume average particle diameter oP a particle group to the number average particle diameter of the same particle group is generally in the range of ~rom 1 to 3.5.
Although the aforementioned rubber ingredients may contain up to 2 percent of a cross-linking agent, based on the weight of the rubber-forming monomer or monomers, cross~linking may present problems in dissolving the rubber in the monomers for the graft 3 polymerization reaction, particularly for a mass or suspension polymerization reaction, and is therefore not generally preferred for mass or suspension polymerized ingredients. In addition, excessive cross-linking can result in loss of the rubbery characteristics and is there~ore also not generally pre~erred even for the WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 -21- 2 ~
emulsion polymerized ingredients. In the event that a cross-linking agent is employed it can be any of the agents conventionally employed for cross-linking diene rubbers, for example, divinylbenzene, diallyl maleate, diallyl fumarate, diallyl adipate, allyl acrylate, allyl methacrylate, diacrylates and dimethylacrylates of polyhydric alcohols (e.g., ethylene glycol dimethylacrylate, etc.), and the like.
It may also be desirable to include in the present ABS-type compositions amounts of other polymers and/or copolymers such as polymers and/or copolymers of phenylene oxide, polycarbonates and polyester polycarbonates.
In graft polymerization reactions, as is well known in the art, the desired polymerizable monomers are combined with the preformed rubber substrate and the monomers are then polymerized to chemically combine or graft at least a portion of the forming polymer upon the rubber substrate. Depending upon the ratio of monomers to rubber substrate and the polymerization conditions, it is possible to achieve both the grafting of the desired amount of polymer onto the rubber substrate and the polymerization of ungrafted polymer to provide all or a portion of the matrix at the same time.
. .
Various techniques are customarily employed for polymerizing rubber monomers including Ziegler-Natta, anionic and free radical polymerization. Free radical emulsion polymerization can be used to produce a latex emulsion which is useful as the base for emulsion polymerization o~ the graft polymer. See, for example, U.S. Patent 4,243,76i.
.:-. .
':
W091/~5~ ~ PCT/US91/02276 ?,~ ?,~ t; -22-~ .~
The various techniques suitable for producing the polymeric components of the present invention are well known in the art. Examples of these known polymerization processes include mass, mass-solution, mass-suspension, suspension and emulsion polymerization processes as well as other modification and/or combi~ations of such processes. See, for example, U.S.
Patents 3,509,237; 3,923,494; 4,239,863; 4,243~765; and 4,250,271; which teach such processes. As is well known in the art, the same reaction that is grafting homo- or interpolymer onto one or more of the rubber components can advantageously be used to produce all or part of a corresponding ungrafted homo- or interpolymer for the matrix portion. It should be noted that any production of grafted polymer, in most cases, inherently produces small amounts of ungrafted (i.e. matrix) polymer.
Advantageously (1) small emulsion particles and large emulsion particles are grafted at the same time with monovinylidene aromatic and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers and produce, also at the same time, a small amount of ungrafted SAN or SAN-type interpolymer;
(2) the grafting of the mass particles is done with the same or different monovinylidene aromatic and ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomers in a different, separate process and also produces a portion of the total ungrafted SAN or SAN-type interpolymer desired for the matrix of the final composition; (3) the balance of the ungrafted MSAN-type interpolymer desired as the matrix of the rubber-modified polymer composition hereof is produced separately; and (4) the indicated ingredients are then combined to form the subject polymer compositions. Preferably, the separatel~
. :: . . ..
WO9l/15~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~ 3 ~ '~1 " .
produced MSAN-type interpolymer is produced in a mass or mass-solution type of polymerization process.
In general, the matrix portion of` the present invention comprises: (1) MSAN-type interpolymer; (2) other comonomers interpolymerized into the MSAN-type interpolymer; (3) additional non-elastomeric polymeric material combined therewith; (4) ungrafted, unoccluded polymer produced during the grafting of the emulsion particles; (5) ungrafted, unoccluded polymer produced during the grafting of the mass particles; and/or (6) other filler-type materials. The ~eight average molecular weight (Mw) of all the matrix (ungrafted) polymer, from all sources typically is from 40~000 to at least 300,000, preferably from 70,000 to 200,000. In other words, the Mw's of the ungrafted, unoccluded polymer included in the present rubber-modified polymer compositions, which amounts of polymer: (1) can be produced during the grafting of the emulsion particles;
(2) can be produced during the gra~ting of the mass particles; (3) are the MSAN-type polymer; and/or (4) can be from other sources of ungrafted matrix polymer, will average out to be within the ~esired range.
When the MSAN-type interpolymer and the first and second graft copolymers are blended together as described herein, a rubber-modified, rigid, heat- and impact-resistant polymer composition is formed.
Advantageously, the composition has a Vicat softening 3 point of at least 104C (DIN-B), preferably at least 112C. The impact strength of the compositions of the present invention, as determined by the Charpy method are advantageously at least 7, and preferably is at least 9 kJ/m2. The tensile strength at yield is advantageously at least 50 N~mm2~ and pre~erably is at ;
, . . . . . . . . . ............. ... . .
;'' : : ' ,, . . ' ' ' ' ~ . .
'. : ' " ' .''. ' . ~ ' ' .' `, ` ' ~, WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ -24-le~ast 55 N/mm2. The compositions of the present invention advantageously have an elastic modulus of at least 2400 MPa, and preferably at least 2500 MPa.
It should be noted that the weight percentages of the three polymeric components of the invention, i.e.
the MSAN-type polymer and the first and second graft copolymers, are based upon the total weight of these components.
The present invention is further illustrated by reference to the following specific examples, preparations, and comparative experiments. All parts and percentages are by weight unless otherwise explicitly indicated. Various standard test methods are used to evaluate the physical properties of the various polymer compositions. The notched Izod impact strength values are determined according to IS0 180 4a. Tensile strengths at yield and rupture (Ty and Tr, respectively) and percent elongation are determined according to DIN 53455-6-3. Melt flow rate (MFR) values are determined according to DIN 53735-U. Vicat heat distortion is determined according to DIN 53460, Condition B. The Charpy impact is determined according to DIN 53453. The elastic modulus is determined according to DIN 53457. The Comparative Experiments are not embodiments of the present invention.
Preparation 1 MSAN.1 A mixture of 8 percent N-phenylmaleimide, 52 percent styrene, 20 percent acrylonitrile and 20 percent ethylbenzene is fed to an SAN coil reactor at a temperature between 140 and 146C. In a separate feed stream a solution of a radical-forming organic compollnd WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~:5 ~
is supplied to the reactor. The prepolymer of 40 to 70 percent solids is devolatilized by applying vacuum.
PreDaration 2, MSAN.2 The procedure of Preparation 1 is repeated except that the feed mixture contains 18 percent acrylonitrile, 48 percent styrene, arld 26 percent ethylbenzene, the reactor temperature is from 145 to 152C, and the prepolymer solution contains from 40 to 60 percent solids.
Pre3aration of Mass ABS.3 and .4 A mass particle constituent is prepared by dissolving polybutadiene (BUNA HX529C brand rubber available from Bayer A.G.) in a mixture of styrene, acrylonitrile and ethylbenzene, then polymerizing the monomers while agitating and/or otherwise shearing to achieve the desired rubber particle size. During the polymerization some forming interpolymer is grafted to the rubber while some does not graft but forms matrix interpolymer. In this process, as in all grafting processes, varying amounts of matrix interpolymer can be formed (in addition to the grafted portion) depending on 25 the amounts of monomers supplied. ;~;
Pre~aration of Mass ABS.5 The procedure of the Preparation of Mass ABS.3 and .4 is repeated except that a different polybutadiene (B~NA HX565 brand rubber available from Bayer A.G.) is employed. In addition, the large particles of the bimodal distribution are prepared simultaneously in a - - .. . . . - . .. . , ~ ................ . . . . .
~: , : , .: :. : . . . .:, . , - , , . :- . . .
:. .:. :: ,.. ; :: .. . ... . . . ,.: , ~. . . :.; , ,, . :
. :: : .. . . . . . . ..
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~ ç;~ 26-parallel reactor. Preparation of Emulsion ABS.6, .7 and.8 An aqueous latex containing particles of rubber is heated while the graftable monomers (styrene and acrylonitrlle), mercaptan, persulfate initiator, and emulsifying agent are supplied. The latex, contalning the SAN-grafted rubber particles as well as some ungrafted SAN is freeze coagulated, thawed, centrifuged, then air dried to reduce the water content below 1 percent in the resultant powdery polymer composition.
This procedure describes the preparation of monomodal emulsion ABS.7 as well as the preparation of the small particles in bimodal emulsion ABS.6 and bimodal emulsi~n ABS.8.
The bimodal emulsion ABS materials are prepared by adding, prior to the addition of the graftable monomers, about 0.34 weight percent based on the total weight of rubber of an agglomerating agent to the starting aqueous latex of the proceeding paragraph. The agglomerating agent consists of polybutadiene core with a shell of ethylacrylate-methacrylic acid (92/8) copolymer. A portion of particles agglomerate to give a bimodal particle size distribution of large particles and small particles. This latex is then grafted and recovered in the same ~anner described in the proceeding paragraph.
:
Further characteristics of the products of the Preparations are given in Table A.
:
,",.
... , ~ . ~ ; . ;- .. ... : . :.... .. . .
WO91/155~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~ 7 ,~ 3 ~ ~
TABLE A ~ .
_ . . .
MSAN.1 MSAN.2 Mass ABS.3 Mass ABS.4 :
Weight ~ O 0 7.0 12.5 rubber .
5 Rubber type 100 ~ 100 %
butadiene butadiene Dv (microns) 0.65 1.11 Rigid Phase Composition:
~Acrylonitrile 21.5 21.5 24.7 24 10 %Styrene 64.5 64.5 75.3 76 %N-PMI* 14 14 Weight Average 155,000 95,000 185,000 166,000 Molecular Weight Mass Emulsion Emulsion Emulsion ABS.5 ABS.6 ABS.7 ABS.8 .
Weight % 15 52.5 55 47 rubber Rubber type 100 % 100 % 93:7 93:7 .
butadiene butadiene butadiene /styrene Dv (microns) BIMODAL BIMODAL 0.15 BIMODAL
0.6 0.07 0.15 1.2 0.50 0.55 Rigid Phase Composition:
25 %Acrylonitrile 24 29.5 29.5 29.5 %Styrene 76 70.5 70.5 70.5 %N~PMI*
Weight Average 163,000 125,000 125,000 125,000 Molecular 3 Weight ` N-Phenylmaleimide ,'.
..
~ . . . . , ~ . ~ .
~ . , , . :, .. ... - -,- , . - ~ - . . . ~
.. .. . .. . . . .~ . . . .. . . . . .
WO91/155~ PCT/USsl/0~276 ~ ~ -28-Example 1 A mixture of 20 parts ~mulsion ABS.6, 20 parts Mass ABS.3, and 60 parts MSAN.l are dry blended. The resulting blend is then compounded into a homogeneous melt on a compounder and is extruded into strands which are then pelletized. The pellets are injection molded into standard test bars having the blended composition.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table l.
Example 2 .
The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using 15 parts Emulsion ABS.6, 50 parts Mass ABS.39 and 35 parts MSAN.l. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table l.
.
; .. , , ~.. , .. ~ - . , ; . :, ,: : . . -WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 2 ~
TABLE 1 ~
: .
Example 1 Example 2 Emulsion ABS.6 20 15 Mass ABS.3 20 50 MSAN.t 60 35 ~:
% Emulsion rubber 10.4 7.8 % Mass rubber 1.4 3.5 Total rubber content 11.8 11.3 Mass~Total rubber ratio 0.12 0.31 i :, Ty (N/mm2) 55.2 56.0 Tr (N/mm2~ ~ 43.4 43.8~ ~ ;
Elongation (%) : 25 18: :
E-Mod (MPa) : 2600 2520 Vicat (C) 113.0 108.9 : -:
Charpy (KJ/m2) ~ 9.2 10.5 : .
Izod (J~m) 119 147 ~ ..
MFR (g/(10 min.)) 4.4 5.4 : ~:
' ' ' , 34 ~
WO91/1~ PCT/US91tO2276 ~ -30-?3~3 ExamDles 3-5 and Comparative Experiments 6-7 The pro~edure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 2. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 2.
Ex.3 Ex~4 E~.5 C.E.5 C.E.7 Emulsion ABS.6 15 23 17 16.4 20 Mass ABS.3 35 17 23 7.1 MSAN.1 50 60 60 76.5 80 % Emulsion 7.8 11.96 8.84 8.5 10.4 rubber % Mass 2.45 1.19 1.61 0.5 Rubber Total rubber Content 10.25 13.15 10.45 9.0 10.4 Mass/Total rubber 0.24 0.09 0.15 0.06 ratio Vicat (C) 112 114 115 118 118 Charpy 8.4 9.9 7.8 4.2 4.2 (kJ/m2) Izod (J/m) 109 130 85 59 58 Ty (N~mm2) 57.6 53.9 58.1 62.4 59.6 Tr (N/mm2) 45.7 43.0 46.4 53.9 51.5 Elongation 18 22 19 13 17 (%) E-Mod (MPa) 2665 2445 2590 2815 2725 MFR
g/(10 min.) 5.7 4.6 5.0 4.6 4.1 .. . .
WV91/1~ PCT/US9l/~2~76 ~31- 2~ 3 f The compositions of Examples 3-5 exhibit high heat properties as well as unexpectedly high tensile strengths. Comparative Example 6 is outside the desired range of the mass rubber/total rubber ratio and consequently has an unacceptably low impact value.
Comparative Experiment 7 contains no mass ABS and possesses a Charpy value of 4.2, which is too low, despite the fact that the total rubber level is comparable with that of Example 5.
Examples 8-12 and Comparative ExPeriments 13-14 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using 15 the blend components in amounts as specified in Table : .
3. Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 3.
' Wo 91/15544 ~ P~/US9ltO2276 q ~ ?~f 'b' -:
o rr 0 u~
~ L5~ ~ ~) ~ 0 5 ~ ~ N =
C ) ~ I U~ ~1 I N I O N J ~ J
.
C~
. ~ ~ ~o ~ L~ ~ ~ ~
~s~ O O O O :3- ~ C; 3 ~ t- :J C; 0 C~ O
O N ~0 N '-- -- O ' - t~l LS ~ ~ --,_ ~ cr~
~ .
, .
_ ~ u~ r- a ~~ o~ o~
. . . .
X O O O U~ O O ~ ~ U~ ~ t--L~ ~ Ln ~ -- O IS~ a .
' .
_ ~ L~ 3 0 ~ N N =r ~ ~ t--. . . .
X U~ Ln O ~ N O O N 0 0~ Ln e-- 1~\ 0 Li~
r~~ _ ~ Ln -- -- o ~ ~
~ N
m E~o ~o ~o 0 Cl:~ N 0 L~ 0 ~ O ~ . . . .
x If\ O Ln ~ ~I O O C~ O ~ t~
:J -- N Ln ~t -- `-- :
. : ~
:::
O' S -- ~ m ~ N ~D
X O O O O N N O N 0~ 0 11~ 1' -- O
t~ N tYl L~ ~-- ~ -- N ii~ 3 N 11 N
.
0 =r If ~ N ~0 ~ S 0 X Ll~ U~ O ~ ~ O t-- N ~r) ~ ~ O' O~ L~l s r~7 ~ _ o ~ Lr t~
O ~ . ~
N N
C C
O O
U~ Z ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Z C ~:: O '' ~ u~ C 3 ~ a O ~ O O ~ -E ~ ~ EO :~ ~ o ~ ~ N k, ¢ ~ ¢ ~ ~ ~ L ~
, , '': . ~ . ~' ', ',' ,: , ' WO91/155~ P~T/US91/02276 ~23 7 ~;~ `3 .~ 7 Examples 8-12 are embodiments of the invention exhibiting high Vicat softening temperatures with unexpectedly high tensile properties. Comparative Example 13 contains 14.6 percent rubber which is above the upper limit for the rubber level as specified in this invention. Consequently, although the impact is high, the Young's Modulus is too low. Comparative Experiment 14, which is outside the scope of the invention since it has no mass ARS and too much rubber, possesses a very low modulus.
Example 15 and comParative Experiments 16-18 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 4.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 4.
~ ~ ~ ', ' ", WO 91/15~44 PCI/US91/02276 ~;~r~ ,3 ~ 1 - 3 4 -O _r 0 ~i L~ L~ O .` - ~D Ln Ln r- a; O o I L~ o L~ _r ~-~O
N
,_ ~J _r r.~
X Ln Ln o _r N oo c~ ~n ~- L~ oo Ln L~ ,- ~o Ln i ~- o ln _r ~- UD
N : :
. Ln ~ co ~
C~ Ln O Ln o~ O ~D _r N ~o a~ ~- Ln ~r I =r -- ~- ~ L~ 3 N : :
O Ln : :
,_ _r oo Ln 0 ~-X L~ o Ln N o oo O L~ n c~ Ln ~r ~ ~- _r _r I ~- N ln 3 '~
~1 m .;
¢ ~D
oo ~ ~ o~ o O O O N N ln c~ ~o ~ c~ ~o ~ N N I ~ -- Ln 3 0 In c~ - =r X O O O O N r~ ~ c~ 3 uO '- Ln N ~ -- c~ Ln _r -- ~-,_ Ln . ..
n N 3 N =r X o o o o~ oO c~ cn _r L~ ~ Ln o N N ~ I ~L~ _r ~ o N
~ .
~ N
Vl ~D ~
. v~ ~ Z X ~ ~ ~ ~ :: O O
~¢ ~ I C~ ~ O ¢: O~
E ct:l ~ OQ u7 u~ 3 o Ci :~: C ~ ~ ~ '- i~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ' ' WO91/lS~ PCT~VSgl/02~76 ~7~?7 In Table 4, Mw indicates weight average molecular weight of the MSAN component~s) o~ the blend.
The data in Table 4 demonstrate the effect of the molecular weight of the MSAN with regard to the retention of reasonable (i.e. Charpy >7) impact performance at equivalent tensile properties. For Comparative Experiments 16, 17 and 18, although the rubber levels and ratio of mass-to-total rubber are within the claimed ranges, the MSAN molecular weight of 92,000 is too low to give compositions with desirable impact properties.
Examples 20-23 and Comparative Experiment 19 The procedure of Example 1 is repeated using the blend components in amounts as specified in Table 5.
Further characteristics of the blended composition and results of physical testing are given in Table 5.
. .
: : .
WO9~ PCT/US91/02~76 e~ TABLE 5 C.E.19 Ex.20 Ex.21 Ex.Z2 Ex.23 Emulsion ABS.6 20 - 13.4 - 13 Emulsion ABS.7 - 20 Emulsion ABS.8 - - - 15 Mass ABS.3 - 35 - 50 49 Mass ABS.4 45 Mass ABS.5 ~ - 40.6 - - -MSAN.1 - 45 46.0 35 35 MSAN.2 35 M~S - - - - 3 Vicat (C) 104 111 110 110 110 Charpy (kJ/m2) 13.1 13.3 10.3 9.6 9.3 Izod (J/m) 202 203 167 136 156 MFR (DIN) (g/10 min.) 10.15 3.2 n.m. 4.6 n.m.
Ty (N/mm2) 43.5 52.7 50.0 56.6 53.5 Tr (N/mm2) 35.5 41.1 40.7 43.8 41.7 Elongation (%) 29 21 38 22 16 E-Mod. (MPa) 2200 2410 2460 2590 2410 n m. - not measured The grade of methacrylate-butadiene-styrene (referred to as "MBS" in Table 5) rubber used is Paraplex 3607 from the Rohm and Haas Company.
(Paraplex is a trademark of the Rohm and Haas Company).
In the Examples summarized in Tables 1-4, the .. .. . .
emulsion ingredient in the blend system has rubber particles made from essentially 100% butadiene.
However, as is illustrated by Examples 20 and 22, emulsion rubber particles consisting of 93 percent ., - ~
' ; : ' .
, .
WO91/15~ PCT/US91/02276 ~7~3~7 butadiene with 7 percent styrene are within the scope of the invention. The use of monomodal emulsion ABS
is also shown in Example 20. The use of bimodal mass ABS is shown in Example 21. Alternative impact modification packages, such as mixtures of emulsion ABS with MBS are shown in Example 23 to give blends with properties in the desired ranges. However, for a monomodal mass ABS component, a rubber particle size of I.ll micron was found to be above the upper limit for maintaining good tensile properties as is illustrated by Comparative Experiment 19.
. :
` -.. :: ~ .. ,. , . . ;.. . : ., . .. . . .. : . ,:
. . . .: . . , . . . : . . . .
- . . . .. . . ., . i ~, . . . .... . .. . .. .
Claims (12)
1. A rubber-modified composition comprising a blend of:
(1) from 7 to 76 weight percent, based on therubber-modified composition, of an interpolymerof a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, amaleimide monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer;
(2) from 7 to 25 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a first graft copolymer composition, prepared by an emulsion process; and (3) from 17 to 85 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a second graft copolymer composition prepared by a mass-type process wherein (a) the weight average molecular weight of the interpolymer is at least 120,000, (b) the first graft copolymer composition comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of a copolymer (A) grafted at least in part to from 30 to 70 weight percent of an emulsion rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65 micron, (c) the said copolymer (A) comprises in polymerized form from 10 to 60 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (d) the second graft copolymer composition comprises a copolymer (B) grafted at least in part to a mass rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of less than one micron, (e) copolymer (B) comprises in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (f) the total rubber content of the said rubber-modified composition comprises from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and (g) the weight ratio of rubber particles prepared by mass polymerization to the total rubber content of the rubber-modified composition is from 0.09 to 0.4.
(1) from 7 to 76 weight percent, based on therubber-modified composition, of an interpolymerof a monovinylidene aromatic monomer, amaleimide monomer and an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer;
(2) from 7 to 25 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a first graft copolymer composition, prepared by an emulsion process; and (3) from 17 to 85 weight percent, based on the rubber-modified composition, of a second graft copolymer composition prepared by a mass-type process wherein (a) the weight average molecular weight of the interpolymer is at least 120,000, (b) the first graft copolymer composition comprises from 30 to 70 weight percent of a copolymer (A) grafted at least in part to from 30 to 70 weight percent of an emulsion rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of from 0.05 to 0.65 micron, (c) the said copolymer (A) comprises in polymerized form from 10 to 60 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 40 to 90 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (d) the second graft copolymer composition comprises a copolymer (B) grafted at least in part to a mass rubbery substrate polymer, the substrate polymer having an average particle size of less than one micron, (e) copolymer (B) comprises in polymerized form from 15 to 36 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer and from 64 to 85 weight percent of a copolymerizable monovinylidene aromatic monomer, (f) the total rubber content of the said rubber-modified composition comprises from 8.5 to 13.5 weight percent, and (g) the weight ratio of rubber particles prepared by mass polymerization to the total rubber content of the rubber-modified composition is from 0.09 to 0.4.
2. The composition of Claim 1 wherein the emulsion rubbery substrate polymer has a bimodal rubber particle size distribution wherein the peak particle size value is from 0.05 to 0.25µfor the small particles and from 0.35 to 0.75µ for the large particles.
3. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the maleimide monomer comprises N-phenylmaleimide.
4. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the molecular weight of the MSAN-type interpolymer is at least 150,000.
5. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the total rubber content is from 10 to 13.5 weight percent.
6. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims having a Charpy impact value of at least 7 kJ/m2.
7. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims having a Vicat heat distortion temperature of at least 104°C.
8. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims having a tensile yield of at least 50 N/mm2.
9. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims having an elastic modulus of at least 2400 MPa.
10. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the interpolymer comprises from 15 to 43 weight percent of an ethylenically unsaturated nitrile monomer, from 8 to 50 weight percent of an N-aryl maleimide monomer, and from 14 to 75 weight percent of a monovinylidene aromatic monomer.
11. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the second graft copolymer comprises from 0.75 to 15 weight percent rubber.
12. The composition as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims wherein the Vicat heat distortion temperature is at least 112°C.
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB9007702.5 | 1990-04-05 | ||
GB909007702A GB9007702D0 (en) | 1990-04-05 | 1990-04-05 | High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA2078337A1 true CA2078337A1 (en) | 1991-10-06 |
Family
ID=10673934
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA 2078337 Abandoned CA2078337A1 (en) | 1990-04-05 | 1991-04-03 | High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties |
Country Status (8)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP0523161A4 (en) |
JP (1) | JPH05506051A (en) |
AU (1) | AU640478B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2078337A1 (en) |
GB (1) | GB9007702D0 (en) |
MX (1) | MX174589B (en) |
TW (1) | TW205562B (en) |
WO (1) | WO1991015544A1 (en) |
Families Citing this family (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US5270387A (en) * | 1990-01-02 | 1993-12-14 | The Dow Chemical Company | High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties |
DE19649255A1 (en) * | 1996-11-28 | 1998-06-04 | Bayer Ag | Thermoplastic high-gloss molding compounds of the ABS type |
DE19649249A1 (en) * | 1996-11-28 | 1998-06-04 | Bayer Ag | Improved thermoplastic molding compounds of the ABS type |
KR100364232B1 (en) * | 1997-12-22 | 2003-02-19 | 제일모직주식회사 | Preparation method of thermoplastic resin with excellent impact resistance and low gloss |
DE19858731A1 (en) | 1998-12-18 | 2000-06-21 | Bayer Ag | ABS molding composition for molded articles comprises polymer comprising graft styrene/acrylonitrile polymer and three different butadiene latexes, graft polymer with rubber and rubber-free copolymer |
Family Cites Families (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3509238A (en) * | 1966-03-21 | 1970-04-28 | Monsanto Co | Abs graft polyblends containing two graft polymers with different degrees of grafting |
US3652721A (en) * | 1970-07-24 | 1972-03-28 | Monsanto Co | Novel graft copolymer blends with two different particle sizes and method of making same |
DE3135252A1 (en) * | 1981-09-05 | 1983-03-17 | Basf Ag, 6700 Ludwigshafen | THERMOPLASTIC MOLDING |
JPS59232138A (en) * | 1983-06-15 | 1984-12-26 | Mitsubishi Monsanto Chem Co | Heat- and impact-resistant resin composition |
AU596724B2 (en) * | 1986-12-11 | 1990-05-10 | Monsanto Kasei Company | Heat and impact resistant resin composition |
DE3802614A1 (en) * | 1988-01-29 | 1989-08-03 | Basf Ag | SHAPE DIMENSIONS AND THEIR USE |
-
1990
- 1990-04-05 GB GB909007702A patent/GB9007702D0/en active Pending
-
1991
- 1991-04-03 EP EP19910907833 patent/EP0523161A4/en not_active Ceased
- 1991-04-03 JP JP91507757A patent/JPH05506051A/en active Pending
- 1991-04-03 AU AU76955/91A patent/AU640478B2/en not_active Ceased
- 1991-04-03 CA CA 2078337 patent/CA2078337A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 1991-04-03 WO PCT/US1991/002276 patent/WO1991015544A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1991-04-05 MX MX2524691A patent/MX174589B/en unknown
- 1991-04-10 TW TW80102743A patent/TW205562B/zh active
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
JPH05506051A (en) | 1993-09-02 |
EP0523161A1 (en) | 1993-01-20 |
GB9007702D0 (en) | 1990-06-06 |
EP0523161A4 (en) | 1993-07-07 |
AU7695591A (en) | 1991-10-30 |
WO1991015544A1 (en) | 1991-10-17 |
MX174589B (en) | 1994-05-27 |
TW205562B (en) | 1993-05-11 |
AU640478B2 (en) | 1993-08-26 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
US5041498A (en) | Trimodal ABS compositions having good gloss and reduced gloss sensitivity | |
US5270387A (en) | High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties | |
US4713420A (en) | ABS compositions having trimodal rubber particle distributions | |
EP0190884B1 (en) | Abs compositions having trimodal rubber particle distributions and process | |
EP0746576B1 (en) | Process for the preparation of multimodal abs polymers | |
JPH0380161B2 (en) | ||
EP0390781B1 (en) | Abs compositions having trimodal rubber particle distributions | |
EP0277687B2 (en) | Rubber-reinforced monovinylidene aromatic polymer resins and a method for their preparation | |
US4524180A (en) | Rubber-modified, impact-resistant polymeric compositions | |
AU640478B2 (en) | High heat styrenic copolymer blends having improved tensile properties | |
KR910005576B1 (en) | Rubber-modified monovinylidene aromatic polymer composition containing three different types of rubber particles | |
CA1296823C (en) | Graft copolymer and styrene based resin composition | |
US5610235A (en) | High gloss graft copolymer blend containing emulsion graft copolymer and bulk graft copolymer | |
JPS61101547A (en) | Resin composition | |
KR100580966B1 (en) | The thermoplastic elastomeric graft polymer composition | |
CA1318737C (en) | Abs compositions having trimodal rubber particle distributions | |
JP3508357B2 (en) | Impact resistant reinforced material and impact resistant reinforced polystyrene | |
JPH0791436B2 (en) | Matte resin composition | |
JP2001131369A (en) | Styrene-based resin composition | |
MXPA96003555A (en) | Process for the preparation of polymers of absmultimoda | |
JPH0425518A (en) | Rubber-modified styrene resin composition |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
FZDE | Dead |