When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Vinyl chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_chloride

    Vinyl chloride is an organochloride with the formula H 2 C=CHCl. It is also called vinyl chloride monomer (VCM) or chloroethene. It is an important industrial chemical chiefly used to produce the polymer polyvinyl chloride (PVC). Vinyl chloride is a colourless flammable gas that has a sweet odor and is carcinogenic.

  3. Polyvinyl chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_chloride

    In the early 1970s, the carcinogenicity of vinyl chloride (usually called vinyl chloride monomer or VCM) was linked to cancers in workers in the polyvinyl chloride industry. Specifically workers in polymerization section of a B.F. Goodrich plant near Louisville, Kentucky , were diagnosed with liver angiosarcoma also known as hemangiosarcoma , a ...

  4. Polymerisation inhibitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymerisation_inhibitor

    In polymer chemistry, polymerisation inhibitors (US: polymerization inhibitors) are chemical compounds added to monomers to prevent their self-polymerisation. Unsaturated monomers such as acrylates, vinyl chloride, butadiene and styrene require inhibitors for both processing and safe transport and storage.

  5. Vinyl polymer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_polymer

    Vinyl polymers are subject of several structural variations, which greatly expands the range of polymers and their applications. With the exception of polyethylene, vinyl polymers can arise from head-to-tail linking of monomers, head-to-head combined with tail-to-tail, or a mixture of those two patterns. Additionally the substituted carbon center in such polymers is stereogenic (a "chiral center")

  6. Emulsion polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulsion_polymerization

    A monomer is dispersed or emulsified in a solution of surfactant and water, forming relatively large droplets in water. Excess surfactant creates micelles in the water. Small amounts of monomer diffuse through the water to the micelle. A water-soluble initiator is introduced into the water phase where it reacts with monomer in the micelles.

  7. Vinyl halide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_halide

    General structure of a vinyl halide, where X is a halogen and R is a variable group. In organic chemistry, a vinyl halide is a compound with the formula CH 2 =CHX (X = halide). The term vinyl is often used to describe any alkenyl group. For this reason, alkenyl halides with the formula RCH=CHX are sometimes called vinyl halides.

  8. Vinyl group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinyl_group

    An industrially important example is vinyl chloride, precursor to PVC, [3] a plastic commonly known as vinyl. Chessboard made from polyvinyl chloride. Vinyl is one of the alkenyl functional groups. On a carbon skeleton, sp 2-hybridized carbons or positions are often called vinylic. Allyls, acrylates and styrenics contain vinyl groups.

  9. Talk:Vinyl chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Vinyl_chloride

    Vinyl chloride is a chemical intermediate, not a final product. Due to the hazardous nature of vinyl chloride to human health there are no end products that use vinyl chloride in its monomer form. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is very stable, storable, and not toxic as the vinyl chloride monomer (VCM). [citation needed] Vinyl chloride liquid is fed ...