Polyoxymethylene ( POM), also known as acetal, polyacetal, and polyformaldehyde, is an engineering thermoplastic used in precision parts requiring high stiffness, low friction, and excellent dimensional stability. Short-chained POM (chain length between 8 and 100 repeating units) is also better known as paraformaldehyde (PFA). As with many other synthetic , polyoxymethylenes are produced by different chemical firms with slightly different formulas and sold as Delrin, Kocetal, Ultraform, Celcon, Ramtal, Duracon, Kepital, Polypenco, Tenac and Hostaform.
POM is characterized by its high strength, hardness and rigidity to −40 °C. POM is intrinsically opaque white because of its high crystalline composition but can be produced in a variety of colors. POM has a density of 1.410–1.420g/cm3.
Typical applications for injection-molded POM include high-performance engineering components such as small gear wheels, Glasses, , , fasteners, gun parts, knife handles, and lock systems. The material is widely used in the automotive and consumer electronics industry. POM's electrical resistivity is 14×1015 Ω⋅cm making it a dielectric with a 19.5MV/m breakdown voltage. Acetal (Polyoxymethylene)
Circa 1952, research chemists at DuPont synthesized a version of POM, and in 1956 the company filed for patent protection of the homopolymer, forgetting to mention in the patent the term copolymer, opening thus the road to competitors. DuPont credits R. N. MacDonald as the inventor of high-molecular-weight POM. News & Media Relations Home - DuPont EMEA Patents by MacDonald and coworkers describe the preparation of high-molecular-weight hemiacetal-terminated (~O−CH2OH) POM, but these lack sufficient thermal stability to be commercially viable. The inventor of a heat-stable (and therefore useful) POM homopolymer was Stephen Dal Nogare, who discovered that reacting the hemiacetal ends with acetic anhydride converts the readily depolymerizable hemiacetal into a thermally stable, melt-processable plastic.
In 1960, DuPont completed construction of a plant to produce its own version of acetal resin, named Delrin, at Parkersburg, United States. Also in 1960, Celanese completed its own research. Shortly thereafter, in a limited partnership with the Frankfurt firm Hoechst AG, a factory was built in Kelsterbach, Hessen; from there, Celcon was produced starting in 1962, with Hostaform joining it a year later. Both remain in production under the auspices of Celanese and are sold as parts of a product group now called 'Hostaform/Celcon POM''.
To make polyoxymethylene copolymer, formaldehyde is generally converted to trioxane (specifically 1,3,5-trioxane, also known as trioxin). This is done by acid catalysis (either sulfuric acid or acidic ion-exchange resins) followed by purification of the trioxane by distillation and/or extraction to remove water and other active hydrogen-containing impurities. Typical copolymers are Hostaform from Celanese and Ultraform from BASF.
The co-monomer is typically dioxolane, but ethylene oxide can also be used. Dioxolane is formed by reaction of ethylene glycol with aqueous formaldehyde over an acid catalyst. Other diols can also be used.
Trioxane and dioxolane are polymerized using an acid catalyst, often boron trifluoride etherate, BF3OEt2. The polymerization can take place in a non-polar solvent (in which case the polymer forms as a slurry) or in neat trioxane (e.g. in an extruder). After polymerization, the acidic catalyst must be deactivated and the polymer stabilized by melt or solution hydrolysis to remove unstable end groups.
Stable polymer is melt-compounded, adding thermal and oxidative stabilizers and optionally lubricants and miscellaneous fillers.
Typical applications for injection-molded POM include high-performance engineering components (e.g. gear wheels, ski bindings, , fasteners, lock systems). The material is widely used in the automotive and consumer electronics industry. There are special grades that offer higher mechanical toughness, stiffness or low-friction/wear properties.
POM is commonly extruded as continuous lengths of round or rectangular section. These sections can be cut to length and sold as bar or sheet stock for machining.
+ | Density | 1.41 | kg/dm3 |
Melting point | 165 | °C | |
Specific thermal capacity | 1500 | J/kg/K | |
Specific thermal conductivity | 0.31 to 0.37 | W/m/K | |
Coefficient of thermal expansion | 120 | ppm/K |
POM is a relatively strong plastic, nearly as strong as epoxy, or aluminum, but a bit more flexible:
+ !Property !value !units | ||
Tensile yield stress | 62 | MPa |
Tensile modulus | 2700 | MPa |
Elongation at yield | 2.5 | % |
Tensile breaking stress | 67 | MPa |
Elongation at break | 35 | % |
Impact strength | 80 | kJ/m2 |
+ !Property !conditions !value !units | |||
Coefficient of friction against steel | 0.3 m/s, 0.49 MPa | 0.31 | |
Coefficient of friction against steel | 0.3 m/s, 0.98 MPa | 0.37 | |
Specific wear against steel | 0.49 MPa | 0.65 | mm3/N/km |
Specific wear against steel | 0.98 MPa | 0.30 | mm3/N/km |
Coefficient of friction against POM | 0.15 m/s, 0.06 MPa | 0.37 |
Prices for large quantities, in October 2023, in US$/kg:
Prices and availability retail / small wholesale :
Retail price November 2023 in the Netherlands : from 19 to 27 euro/dm3
The price of POM is about the same as that of epoxy.
There are two main differences between POM and epoxy resins:
Epoxy resins need time to cure, while POM has fully matured as soon as it has cooled down.
POM has very little shrinkage: from 165 °C to 20 °C it shrinks by just 0.17%.
POM sheets can be cut cleanly and accurately using an infrared laser, such as in a CO2 laser cutter.
Because the material lacks the rigidity of most metals, care should be taken to use light clamping forces and sufficient support for the work piece.
As can be the case with many polymers, machined POM can be dimensionally unstable, especially with parts that have large variations in wall thicknesses. It is recommended that such features be "designed-out" e.g. by adding fillets or strengthening ribs. Annealing of pre-machined parts before final finishing is an alternative. A rule of thumb is that in general, small components machined in POM suffer from less warping.
Typical etching processes involve chromic acid at elevated temperatures. DuPont uses a patented process for treating acetal homopolymer called satinizing that creates a surface roughness sufficient for micromechanical interlocking. There are also processes involving oxygen plasma and corona discharge. BASF Ultraform product information In order to get a high bond strength without specialized tools, treatments, or roughening, one can use Loctite 401 prism adhesive combined with Loctite 770 prism primer to get bond strengths of ~1700psi.
Once the surface is prepared, a number of adhesives can be used for bonding. These include Epoxy, polyurethanes, and cyanoacrylates. Epoxies have shown shear strength. Cyanoacrylates are useful for bonding to metal, leather, rubber, cotton, and other plastics.
Solvent welding is typically unsuccessful on acetal polymers, due to the excellent solvent resistance of acetal.
Thermal welding through various methods has been used successfully on both homopolymer and copolymer.
In chemistry applications, although the polymer is often suitable for the majority of glassware work, it can succumb to catastrophic failure. An example of this would be using the polymer clips on hot areas of the glassware (such as a flask-to-column, column-to-head or head-to-condenser joint during distillation). As the polymer is sensitive to both chlorine and acid hydrolysis, it may perform very poorly when exposed to the reactive gases, particularly hydrogen chloride (HCl). Failures in this latter instance can occur with seemingly unimportant exposures from well sealed joints and do so without warning and rapidly (the component will split or fall apart). This can be a significant health hazard, as the glass may open or smash. Here, PTFE or a corrosion-resistant stainless steel may be a more appropriate choice.
In addition, POM can have undesirable characteristics when burned. The flame is not self-extinguishing, shows little to no smoke, and the blue flame can be almost invisible in ambient light. Burning also releases formaldehyde gas, which irritates nose, throat, and eye tissues.
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