Santicizer Phosphate Ester Flame Retardant Plasticizers
Plas-Chek and Lankroflex Epoxy Costabilizers and Secondary Plasticizers Lankroflex & Plas-Chek epoxidized soybean oil (ESO), Lankroflex epoxidized linseed oil (ELO) and Lankroflex ED6 are secondary heat stabilizers that are used in a wide variety of flexible PVC formulations.
Clariant Additives – Your specialist for plastics, coatings
Flame retardants help to save lives by slowing down or stopping the spread of fire or reducing its intensity. They are used in anything from phones and curtains to car seats and buildings. Clariant’s halogen-free flame retardants are produced to modern standards in Germany, Switzerland and China.
Quantitative determination of 13 organophosphorous flame
Quantitative determination of 13 organophosphorous flame retardants and plasticizers in a wastewater treatment system by high performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry - ScienceDirect Journal of Chromatography A Volume 1400, 26 June 2015, Pages 149-155 Short communication
Design and synthesis of polyetherimides as a flame-retarded
In this work, polyimide containing benzimidazole and DOPO groups, denoted as mPI, was readily synthesized via the nucleophilic substitution reaction, and used as the latent hardener and flame retardant for DGEBA to prepare flame-retarded one-pot epoxy/imidazole formulations with high performance.
Flame Retardants - National Institute of Environmental Health
Flame retardants are chemicals that are applied to materials to prevent the start or slow the growth of fire. They have been used in many consumer and industrial products since the 1970s, to decrease the ability of materials to ignite. Flame retardants are often added or applied to the following products. Furnishings, such as foam, upholstery
- What are organophosphate flame retardants & plasticizers?
- Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content: Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative Organophosphate flame retardants and plasticizers (PFRs) are a group of chemicals widely added to consumer products.
- Are bio-based plasticizers flame retardant?
- Having discussed flame retardant effects of PVC with conventional plasticizers and added flame retardants, bio-based plasticizer containing flame retardant functionality can now be elaborated. In the area of bio-based plasticizer, epoxidized soybean oil (ESO) has been in use to partially replace DOP for over a decade.
- Do Bio-plasticizers and flame retardants work in flexible PVC?
- This focused review presents current research in the flexible PVC field emphasizing development of bio-plasticizers and flame retardants, and an analysis of examples of bio-plasticizers, chemical structures, and effects on flame retardancy.
- Are cardanols a good source of flame retardant plasticizer?
- This phosphonate-based plasticizer yielded some modest improvements in flame retardant performance when measured by LOI and UL94 V testing (3 mm thickness), further proving that cardanols are a good source of bio-based plasticizer that can be combined with flame retardant chemical structures .
- What are organophosphorus flame retardants?
- Organophosphorus flame retardants (OPFRs) have been increasingly used in various building and decoration materials to fulfill fire safety standards since the phasing out of polybrominated diphenyl ethers. We determined OPFR concentrations in the most commonly used building and decoration materials available in local markets and online in China.
- Is PVC flame retardant?
- Due to the presence of chlorine atoms, PVC is inherently flame retardant, but it cannot always meet all fire safety requirements and maintain a needed balance of properties. One approach to meet this balance of properties is to incorporate flame retardant functionality directly into the plasticizer that is added to PVC.