Subject: Elvace
In a recent DistList I wrote: One assumes he means EVA, Ethylene Vinyl Acetate, which is what Elvace is. Looks like I was wrong. Elvace is indeed properly called VAE, not EVA. The order of mention indicates which is the major component. I should have realized this (and was probably taught it at some time or other, but...). Here is something from Blades "Vinyl Acetate-Ethylene Copolymer Emulsions in Adhesives" (in Skeist. 2nd ed, I think). The development of ethylene-vinyl acetate resins with ethylene as the major monomer component occurred during the 1950's. Such products are more readily related propertywise, to the polyethylenes and their commercial availability was favored since manufacture was adaptable to existing continuous systems for radical polymerization of ethylene. Today the commercially available poly(vinyl acetate-ethylene) polymers can be divided into three groups. 1. Those with low vinyl acetate content (ca 10 - 40 wt %). These are used for hot-melt and plastic (molding) applications. They are manufactured by polyethylene producers in a continuous bulk polymerization process at high pressures and marketed under trade names such as: Elvax (duPont), Ultrathene (USI), Bakelite (UCC), Lupolen V (BASF), Alathon (duPont), Alkathene (ICI), and Montothene (Monsanto). 2. Those with nearly equal vinyl acetate and ethylene contents (45- 55 wt %). These are used for specialty rubber applications and as a graft base for PVC polymerization for impact modification. They are made in a solution copolymerization at medium pressures. There is one dominant commercial product -- Levapren made by Farbenfabriken Bayer. 3. Those with high vinyl acetate content (ca 60 - 90%). These are made by an emulsion polymerization process at 300 - 1500 psi. They are thermoplastic resins sold under such trade names as: Airflex (Air Products and Chemicals, Inc), Elvace (duPont), Vinnapas (Wacker), Mowilith (Hoechst), Sumikaflex (Sumitomo), AmscoRes (Union Oil Corporation), and Vinivil (Montecatini Edison). These products with 5- 40 wt % ethylene in the copolymer appear on the market almost exclusively as emulsions or dispersions in water. They may be viewed as modifications of polyvinyl acetate with ethylene. Such copolymerization in essence reduces they incidence of acetate functionality with respect to polyvinyl acetate as it occurs on the polymer chain. ... In this chapter, we shall deal with the vinyl acetate-ethylene copolymers in which the ethylene content is less than 40 wt %. The other group of copolymers is treated in Chapter 30. I included that last paragraph, because Chapter 30 happens to be Domine and Schaufelberger, "Ethylene Copolymer Based Hot Melt Adhesives", in which it is writ Ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) copolymers represent by a wide margin, the major class of ethylene copolymers use commercially in hot melt adhesives. *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:35 Distributed: Thursday, January 7, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-35-005 ***Received on Sunday, 3 January, 1993