PTFE - The Most Slippery Substance in the World
PTFE is the abbreviation for polytetrafluoroethene, a
saturated fluorocarbon polymer, which was discovered serendipitously by Roy
Plunkett, a 27-year-old research chemist working at the Du Pont Research
Laboratories in Deepwater, New Jersey in 1938. He was actually doing some work
for Kinetic Chemicals, a company founded jointly by Du Pont and General Motors
to commercialise chlorinated fluorocarbon (CFC) refrigerants.
On the morning of 6 April of that year he went to use some
tetrafluoroethene (TFE), a gas which was stored in a cylinder, which he needed
to react with hydrogen chloride. The idea was that this would react with the
C=C bond in TFE thus providing a route to hydrochlorofluorocarbon (HCFC)
manufacture. To his astonishment, the cylinder which should have been holding
1000 grams of the gas only released 990 grams. Plunkett decided to dismantle
the cylinder and, upon tipping it upside down, out came about 10 grams of a
white waxy powder. Plunkett recorded in his laboratory notebook,
On cleaning up a cylinder which had contained approximately
1 kilo of tetrafluoroethylene, a white solid material was obtained, which was
supposed to be a polymerised sample of C2F2...Sample gave good Beilstein test
for halogen.
Thus Plunkett had realised that the gas had polymerised to
form a new polymer, polytetrafluoroethene.
Further investigation of this polymer revealed that it had
some remarkable properties: it was not attacked by corrosive acids, even if
they were hot; it did not dissolve in solvents; it could be cooled to -240°C
without becoming stiff and brittle, and it could be heated to 260°C without
impairing its performance. Furthermore, it could be heated to over 500°C
without burning or charring. In fact, PTFE is attacked only by molten sodium or
fluorine gas under pressure; and so it rivals the noble metals, gold and
platinum, in its unreactivity. Plunkett also noted that the substance had a
slippery feel, and herein lay the secret of its later commercial success.
The difficulties of working with and characterising such an
unreactive material were such that the development of processes for production
of PTFE were prohibitively expensive, and Du Pont all but gave up on it.
Indeed, unlike other plastics, it cannot be extruded, thermoformed,
injection-moulded or rotomoulded. To 'work' it, techniques adapted from powder
metallurgy must be used.
World War II and The Manhattan Project
This all changed in 1941 when the United States became
embroiled in World War II and work on atomic bombs (the Manhattan Project)
acquired a renewed urgency. Large quantities of fluorine were needed for the
manufacture of uranium hexafluoride, from which the fissionable isotope 235U
could be extracted in the gas-diffusion plant at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. However,
both the fluorine and the uranium hexafluoride were so reactive that the
provision of inert buffer gases, lubricants, coolants, gaskets, valve packings,
reactor linings and pipes was critical. A saturated fluorocarbon, such as PTFE,
would fit the bill perfectly. Teflon was also used for the diffusion membranes
by which UF6 made from natural uranium could be isotopically enriched to 235UF6
for the atomic bomb.
During the war, a series of top-secret negotiations resulted
in technical know-how and manufacturing rights being transferred to ICI
(Plastics) in the United Kingdom. The ICI trade-name for PTFE is 'Fluon'.
Commercial Manufacture of PTFE
Du Pont gave the name 'Teflon' to its new polymer in 1945,
and in 1950 they opened the world's first full commercial plant near Parkersburg,
West Virginia.
The Non-Stick Frying Pan
The slippery feel of PTFE is due to the fact that it has
extremely low intermolecular forces (van der Waals forces). The civil market
for PTFE opened up in the 1950s once the American chemist, Louis Hartmann and
the French engineer, Marc Grégoire independently discovered a way to bond PTFE
to aluminium. This was achieved by treating the metal surface with acid, and
applying the PTFE in emulsion form. The product is then baked at 400°C for a
few minutes, allowing the polymer to melt and form a film over the surface.
Following this, the Tefal company was set up in 1956 to market non-stick
cookware.
Gore-tex
In 1969, Dr Bob Gore found a way of expanding PTFE by
heating and stretching it to form a membrane with microscopic pores in the
structure. There are billions of these pores per square centimetre and they are
small enough to keep water droplets out whilst allowing water molecules,
present as vapour from sweat, out. Such a material is said to be 'microporous'.
The PTFE membrane is sandwiched between the outer fabric and inner lining of
the garment, whilst between the membrane and the inner lining is a layer of an
oil-hating (lipophobic) polymer. This also allows the water vapour through, but
prevents the natural oils of the skin from getting through and blocking the
micropores in the PTFE. Gore-tex is now widely used in wet-weather gear and
sportswear.
An interesting application of Gore-tex is as a biocompatible
membrane to facilitate bone tissue restoration in patients with long-standing
periodontal disease. In addition, it is possible to restore or regenerate bone
prior to the placement of bridges or implants.
Other applications for Gore-tex in the bio-medical field
include its use for artificial veins, arteries and trachea replacements. It is
also used for artificial dentures and corneas (for example, for patients
suffering from keratoconus) and as substitute bones for chin, nose, skull and
hip.
Other applications of PTFE
Domestically, PTFE is used as a stain-repellent on clothes,
furniture covers and carpets, where it is marketed under such trade-names as
Scotchgard and Zepel. It is also used on the underside of electric irons and as
dental floss.
PTFE is well-known as the plumbers' tape for sealing joints
in central heating systems. It is also an excellent electrical insulator and is
thus used in electrical wires and cables.
PTFE has the lowest coefficient of friction of any solid
material, due to having very low intermolecular (van der Waals) forces. Hence
it finds use as lubricant-free bearings in motors. Scrap PTFE from industry is
re-used by grinding it to a micro-fine powder and adding it to printers' ink
where it facilitates ink flow.
For more information visit
http://www.h2g2.com/approved_entry/A2953
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polytetrafluoroethylene
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