UV Stabilization and Flame Retardancy of Polyethylene for Piping Applications
Abstract
This work presented an investigation of the ultra violet (UV) stability and flame
retardancy of linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) and low-density
polyethylene manufactured in autoclave process (LDPE-A), that are used widely in
irrigation pipes. Two formulations based on new combinations of hindered amine
light stabilizers (HALS) and UV absorbers were developed and implemented in
LLDPE and LDPE-A for UV stabilization, and six halogen-free flame retardant (FR)
formulations were implemented in the two polyethylene (PE) grades for enhancing
flame retardancy. The UV-stabilized compounds were tested through an artificial
UV weathering experiment that simulated the harsh environmental conditions that
irrigation pipes face, and the FR-containing compounds were assessed in terms of
fire retardancy through a standard flammability test (UL-94 V0). Mechanical and
thermal characterization techniques were employed for both compounds. In terms of
UV stability, LDPE-A compounds exhibited a higher stability against UV aging than
LLDPE compounds. In terms of flammability, the addition of a triazine derivative
and ammonium polyphosphate at a loading of 35 % wt. was found to be the most
efficient, leading to UL-94 V0 ranking in LDPE-A.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/12375Collections
- Mechanical Engineering [64 items ]