Thermal Degradation of Polymers at High Temperatures.

Abstract
Work on thermal degradation of polymers has previously been carried out at temperatures up to about 500° C. In the present work the range has been extended to 850° C. Polystyrene was pyrolyzed in a vacuum and also in helium at atmospheric pressure at 362° and at 850° C. Analysis of the volatile products indicates that higher temperatures and higher pressures cause a greater fragmentation of the volatile products. Samples of poly (vinylidene fluoride), polyacrylonitrile, and polytrivinylbenzene, were pyrolyzed in a vacuum at temperatures from 350° to 800° C. The more volatile products were analyzed qualitatively and quantitatively in a mass spectrometer. The less volatile products were tested for their average molecular weight by a microcryoscopic method. Rates of thermal degradation were also determined for the last three polymers. The activation energies in the temperature range 218° to 440° C were found to be 48, 31, and 73 kcal/mole, respectively, for poly(vinylidene fluoride), polyacrylonitrile, and polytrivinylbenzene.