EDC in PVC Production

5th October 2010
Posted By : ES Admin
The manufacturing of the PVC that carries our water, insulates our power cables, and lines our kitchen floors is a sensitive process. Ethylene dichloride is the first intermediate in the manufacturing of the versatile plastic from raw materials. While useful on its own as a strong solvent, 90% of the EDC produced is dedicated to making vinyl chloride monomer the chemical precursor to PVC.
Heated to 500 °C in a cracking furnace, EDC splits into VCM and recyclable HCl; the products are quickly cooled to avoid recombination, after which unreacted EDC is returned to the furnace. Sometimes the EDC entering the furnace contains a bit of ferric chloride (FeCl3), a catalyst used to chlorinate ethylene in the making of EDC; this contamination is far from trivial, as trace FeCl3 is known to clog the cracking furnace and foul various mechanisms. Additionally, PVC made from EDC with impurities-typically low levels of FeCl3 and chlorine-is less useful than high-quality PVC and fails to meet customer needs.

You must be logged in to comment

Write a comment

No comments




More from Applied Analytics, Inc.

Sign up to view our publications

Sign up

Sign up to view our downloads

Sign up

The Magnetics Show US
22nd May 2024
United States of America The Pasadena Convention Center
2024 World Battery & Energy Storage Industry Expo (WBE)
8th August 2024
China 1st and 2nd Floor, Area A, China Import and Export Fair Complex