, PE:
polyethylene, PVC:
Polyvinyl chloride, PS:
Polystyrene, PET:
Polyethylene terephthalate Susceptibility to photo-oxidation varies depending on the chemical structure of the polymer. Some materials have excellent stability, such as
fluoropolymers,
polyimides,
silicones and certain
acrylate polymers. However, global polymer production is dominated by a range of
commodity plastics which account for the majority of
plastic waste. Of these
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) has only moderate UV resistance and the others, which include
polystyrene,
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and
polyolefins like
polypropylene (PP) and
polyethylene (PE) are all highly susceptible. Photo-oxidation is a form of
photodegradation and begins with formation of
free radicals on the polymer chain, which then react with oxygen in
chain reactions. For many polymers the general
autoxidation mechanism is a reasonable approximation of the underlying chemistry. The process is
autocatalytic, generating increasing numbers of radicals and reactive oxygen species. These reactions result in changes to the
molecular weight (and
molecular weight distribution) of the polymer and as a consequence the material becomes more brittle. The process can be divided into four stages: :
Initiation the process of generating the initial free radical. :
Propagation the conversion of one active species to another :
Chain branching steps which end with more than one active species being produced. The
photolysis of
hydroperoxides is the main example. :
Termination steps in which active species are removed, for instance by
radical disproportionation Photo-oxidation can occur simultaneously with other processes like
thermal degradation, and each of these can accelerate the other.
Polyolefins Polyolefins such as
polyethylene and
polypropylene are susceptible to photo-oxidation and around 70% of light stabilizers produced world-wide are used in their protection, despite them representing only around 50% of global plastic production. The bulk of the polymer is therefore photo-inert and degradation is instead attributed to the presence of various impurities, which are introduced during the manufacturing or processing stages. These include
hydroperoxide and
carbonyl groups, as well as metal salts such as catalyst residues. All of these species act as
photoinitiators. The organic hydroperoxide and carbonyl groups are able to absorb UV light above 290 nm whereupon they undergo photolysis to generate radicals. Metal impurities act as
photocatalysts, although such reactions can be complex. It has also been suggested that polymer-O2
charge-transfer complexes are involved. Initiation generates radical-carbons on the polymer chain, sometimes called macroradicals (P•).
Chain initiation :: Polymer -> P\bullet +\ P\bullet
Chain propagation ::P\bullet +\ O2 -> POO\bullet ::POO\bullet +\ PH -> {POOH} +\ P\bullet
Chain branching ::POOH -> PO\bullet +\ OH\bullet ::{PH} + OH\bullet -> P\bullet +\ H2O ::PO\bullet -> Chain\ scission\ reactions
Termination ::POO\bullet +\ POO\bullet -> cross\ linking\ reaction\ to\ non-radical\ product ::POO\bullet +\ P\bullet -> cross\ linking\ reaction\ to\ non-radical\ product :: P\bullet +\ P\bullet -> cross\ linking\ reaction\ to\ non-radical\ product Classically the carbon-centred macroradicals (P•) rapidly react with oxygen to form hydroperoxyl radicals (POO•), which in turn abstract an H atom from the polymer chain to give a hydroperoxide (POOH) and a fresh macroradical. Hydroperoxides readily undergo
photolysis to give an alkoxyl macroradical radical (PO•) and a
hydroxyl radical (HO•), both of which may go on to form new polymer radicals via hydrogen abstraction. Non-classical alternatives to these steps have been proposed. The alkoxyl radical may also undergo
beta scission, generating an acyl-
ketone and macroradical. This is considered to be the main cause of chain breaking in polypropylene. : Secondary hydroperoxides can also undergo an intramolecular reaction to give a ketone group, although this is limited to polyethylene. : The ketones generated by these processes are themselves photo-active, although much more weakly. At ambient temperatures they undergo
Type II Norrish reactions with chain scission. They may also absorb UV-energy, which they can then transfer to O2, causing it to enter its highly reactive
singlet state. Singlet oxygen is a potent oxidising agent and can go on to cause further degradation. :
Polystyrene es of oxygen and polystyrene
phenyl groups absorb light to form
singlet oxygen, which acts as a radical initiator. : Polystyrene is observed to yellow during photo-oxidation, which is attributed to the formation of
polyenes from these terminal alkenes. as well as hydroperoxides, carbonyl groups, and double bonds. Hydroperoxides formed during processing are the most important initiator to begin with, however their concentration decreases during photo-oxidation whereas carbonyl concentration increases, as such carbonyls may become the primary initiator over time. Propagation steps involve the hydroperoxyl radical, which can abstract hydrogen from both hydrocarbon (-CH2-) and organochloride (-CH2Cl-) sites in the polymer at comparable rates. however PVC does eventually discolour unless
polymer stabilisers are present. Reactions at organochloride sites proceed via the usual hydroperoxyl and hydroperoxide before photolysis yields the α-chloro-alkoxyl radical. This species can undergo various reactions to give carbonyls, peroxide
cross-links and beta scission products.
Poly(ethylene terephthalate) - (PET) Unlike most other commodity plastics
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is able to absorb the
near ultraviolet rays in sunlight. Absorption begins at 360 nm, becoming stronger below 320 nm and is very significant below 300 nm. Despite this PET has better resistance to photo-oxidation than other
commodity plastics, this is due to a poor
quantum yield or the absorption. The degradation chemistry is complicated due to simultaneous
photodissociation (i.e. not involving oxygen) and photo-oxidation reactions of both the aromatic and aliphatic parts of the molecule. Chain scission is the dominant process, with chain branching and the formation of coloured impurities being less common. Carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and carboxylic acids are the main products. Type II Norrish reactions are less common but give rise to
acetaldehyde by way of vinyl alcohol esters. Radicals formed by photolysis may initiate the photo-oxidation in PET. Photo-oxidation of the aromatic
terephthalic acid core results in its step-wise oxidation to 2,5-dihydroxyterephthalic acid. The photo-oxidation process at aliphatic sites is similar to that seen for polyolefins, with the formation of hydroperoxide species eventually leading to beta-scission of the polymer chain. ==Secondary factors==