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Continuous emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate in pulsed sieve plate column.

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Author(s):
Mauri Sergio Alves Palma
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Doctoral Thesis
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Escola Politécnica (EP/BC)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Reinaldo Giudici; Odair Araujo; Liliane Maria Ferrareso Lona; Amilton Martins dos Santos; Claudia Sayer
Advisor: Reinaldo Giudici
Abstract

Industrial emulsion polymerization processes are usually carried out in stirred tanks operated in batch/semibatch or in continuous mode (CSTR). In comparison to batch processes, continuous reactors present several advantages such as lower volumes and better quality control by reducing batch-to-batch variations. Continuous emulsion polymerization in CSTR may exhibit sustained oscillations in conversion, particle size and particle concentration. Such oscillations may be reduced in pulsed tubular reactors due to less axial mixing. In this thesis a new type of tubular reactor, called Pulsed Sieve Plate Column, PSPC, was developed for the continuous process of vinyl acetate emulsion polymerization. This reactor is operated using oscillatory pulsed flow and uses perforated plates as internals. Residence time distribution runs were carried out in a glass reactor in order to characterize the axial mixing and flow patterns in the PSPC. The data were treated using the axially dispersed plug flow model. Axial dispersion coefficient was measured for different conditions of pulse frequency and amplitude, flow rate, plate spacing and viscosity. It was found that the degree of axial mixing can be varied in wide ranges by manipulating pulsation frequency and/or amplitude. Vinyl acetate continuous emulsion polymerization runs were carried out in a jacketed stainless steel reactor (with the same size of the glass reactor). Monomer conversion and particle size distribution was measured both at the reactor exit in transient state and along the reactor length at steady-state. It was found that average residence time and degree of axial mixing affect process and product quality variables, such as monomer conversion, mean particle size and concentration, but did not affect the viscosity of the emulsion produced, for the recipe and conditions used. A mathematical model for the reactor was developed. The model used, based on a well-known kinetic model previously developed in the literature for batch emulsion polymerization, was adapted to the continuous tubular reactor by adding the dispersion and convective terms to the balance equations. The model was numerically solved. Only two parameters were adjusted in this model and the simulated results showed excellent agreement with the experimental results, for steady state conditions. The proposed tubular reactor allows to reach high monomer conversion with similar or even lower residence time than those in batch processes and reaches steady state operation in just one to two mean residence times. The reactor is efficient, easy-to-built, easy-to-clean, robust and promising for use in industrial continuous emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate. (AU)