Synthetic resins or natural rubbers -- part of the class 520 ser – Synthetic resins – Polymerizing in tubular or loop reactor
Reexamination Certificate
1994-03-16
2001-06-12
Wu, David W. (Department: 1713)
Synthetic resins or natural rubbers -- part of the class 520 ser
Synthetic resins
Polymerizing in tubular or loop reactor
C526S065000, C526S317100, C526S318000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06245864
ABSTRACT:
The present invention relates to a copolymer of (a) from 96 to 99.6% molar of ethylene and (b) from 0.4 to 4% molar of a C
3
-C
6
-alkenoic acid or an ester thereof having not more than 14 carbon atoms or a mixture of these monomers, which copolymer may be prepared by polymerization in a continuously operated tubular reactor under a pressure of from 500 to 5,000 bar and at elevated temperature in the presence of free-radical initiators by feeding a mixture of the said reactants to the inlet of the reactor only, restricting the temperature in a first reaction zone to approximately 240° C. and, after the temperature has dropped by from 5 to 20° C., metering further initiator to the beginning of a second reaction zone and completing the reaction at a temperature of up to 300° C.
Copolymers of ethylene and comonomers containing carboxyl groups have already been described in a number of patent specifications. They are prepared either in stirred autoclaves (U.S. Pat. No. 3,520,861, U.S. Pat. No. 4,351,931) or in tubular reactors (DE-A 3,404,742, DE-A 3,404,743, DE-A 3,404,744 and DE-A 1,952,693) under superatmospheric pressure, in which processes considerable heat of reaction is generated, some of which is absorbed by the reaction mixture while the rest must be removed by suitable cooling means.
In some processes (DE-A 3,404,742, DE-A 3,404,743 and DE-A 3,404,744) the reaction mixtures, which contain additionally to ethylene and comonomer(s) free-radical initiators and possibly regulators to control the molar mass, are fed to the tubular reactor at a number of separate points. By this means comonomer conversion is increased significantly, this being achieved, however, at the expense of an increase in technical requirements. The distribution of gas streams under pressures of from several hundred to some thousand bar is not a simple matter both as regards apparatus and with respect to control measures, especially as the concentration of the comonomers must in some cases be varied depending on the port to which they are fed (DE-A 3,404,742). Many high-pressure compressor units are incapable of parting monomer streams accurately, so that the use of this process must remain restricted to very specialized apparatus.
DE-A 1,952,693 (page 2, paragraph 3) further discloses a method of preparing ethylene copolymers in tubular reactors which involves introducing the feed of initiator at various points of the reactor, keeping it distinct from the ethylene feed, with the proviso that the ethylene feed commences only after an adequate amount of initiator has been introduced. Here again, an increase in the comonomer conversion rate involves a sharp increase in technical requirements due to the necessity to branch the ethylene feed a number of times. DE-A 15,952,693 further describes a process for the preparation of ethylene copolymers in a tubular reactor wherein the total reaction mixture is fed to the entry port of the reactor only, a conversion rate of 20 to 25% being obtainable only by pumping a considerable portion of the reaction mixture back into the reactor. Such recycling, however, again complicates the process as regards equipment and engineering procedure.
If the process is carried out in a less complicated stirred autoclave or individual reactor without splitting the feeds or recycling the reaction mixture, the comonomers are integrated in the resulting product only to a relatively low degree (DE-A 3,404,742, page 2, paragraph 2), which results in poorer mechanical properties.
It is an object of the invention to overcome the said drawbacks and provide a copolymer having an adequate proportion of copolymerized units and showing good properties without resorting to technically complicated measures.
We have thus found the copolymers defined at the commencement of this specification.
The process is carried out in a tubular reactor under a pressure of from 500 to 5,000, preferably from 1,700 to 3,500 bar.
The reaction mixture comprising ethylene, the comonomers and initiator is fed only to the entry port of the reactor, so that splitting of the feeds, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,579,918, is not necessary. Conveniently, the reactants are initially heated to a temperature above 50°and preferably above 100° C. with the exclusion of air, so that the reaction starts as the initiator decomposes. Care should be taken to ensure that the temperature does not rise above 240° C. by providing for adequate cooling by means of a liquid flowing round the outer jacket of the tubular reactor. Under these conditions, the comonomers are preferentially integrated in the copolymer with the result that the latter has a higher content of alkenoic acid or ester derivative thereof than the reaction mixture fed to the reactor, this enhancement being due to reactivity differences between ethylene on the one hand and the comonomers on the other, this being more conspicuous the lower the reaction temperature.
An axial temperature profile is set up in the reaction tube. In a first reaction zone, the temperature is allowed to rise to a maximum of 240° C. as a result of the increase in heat generation concomitant with increase in conversion rate. A drop in reaction rate is observable from a fall in reaction temperature under constant cooling conditions. When the temperature has reached a level 5°to 20° C. below the maximum, the reaction is restarted, at the beginning of a second reaction zone, by the introduction of more initiator. This second reaction zone is characterized in that merely unconverted ethylene is polymerized, since virtually all of the comonomer(s) introduced have undergone copolymerization before further initiator is introduced. Appropriate cooling measures should be taken to ensure that the temperature in this second reaction zone does not exceed 300° C. on account of the considerable heat effect of the ethylene polymerization. The total residence time in the tubular reactor is usually between 40 and 120 seconds and is preferably in the range of from 60 to 90 seconds, the reaction mixture taking approximately twice as long to pass through the second reaction zone as through the first zone.
After the reaction mixture has been discharged, the copolymer is separated from unconverted ethylene by pressure release and the latter is advantageously recycled to the tubular reactor. In contrast to the process described in DE-A 1,952,693, only the unconsumed reaction gas is recycled, not the entire mixture.
Suitable comonomers are all C
3
-C
6
-alkenoic acids which copolymerize with ethylene under the conditions stated, for example acrylic, fumaric, methacrylic, itaconic, aconitic, maleic and citraconic acids, and their anhydrides. Mixtures of said acids may also be used. The alkenoic acids to be used in the present invention are added to the ethylene at the entry port of the reactor in concentrations of from 0.1 to 0.8% molar. This gives copolymers containing from 0.4 to 3.0% and preferably from 0.8 to 2.1% molar of copolymerized units of alkenoic acid.
Other suitable comonomers are all esters of said acids which have from 4 to 14 carbon atoms and which are copolymerizable with ethylene. It is preferred to use esters of acrylic acid with alcohols having up to 8 carbon atoms. The acrylates of methanol, ethanol, propanol and n-butanol and mixtures thereof are particularly suitable. They are added to the reaction mixture at the inlet of the reactor in concentrations of from 0.1 to 0.8% molar. In the resulting copolymers, the esters are present in concentrations ranging from 0.4 to 3.2% and preferably from 1.0 to 2.6% molar.
Polymerization is started by free-radical initiators which are conveniently added to the mixture at the reactor inlet in concentrations of from 0.5 to 10 molar ppm, based on ethylene and again at the beginning of the second reaction zone in concentrations of from 1 to 20 molar ppm, based on ethylene. Suitable initiators are peroxides, hydroperoxides or compounds containing azo groups, or mixtures of these substances.
Examples are:
t-butyl perpivalate, di-t-butyl peroxide, t-butyl hydroperoxid
Hasenbein Norbert
Koehler Gernot
Muehlenbernd Thomas
BASF - Aktiengesellschaft
Keil & Weinkauf
Lu Caixia
Wu David W.
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