Formulations

US2888483

This invention relates to the reaction of organic substituted hydrazines with sulfur dioxide. In one specific aspect, it relates to a novel process for making organic substituted hydrazinium hydrazinesulfinates. In yet another aspect, it relates to the composition of matter produced thereby.

US2803688

My invention relates to improvements in blowing agents for the manufacture of porous rubber and plastic articles. Foamed articles of plastics or rubber are prepared by various means including solution of nitrogen under high pressures and subsequent release of pressure. A simpler method is to incorporated in the rubber or plastic composition a suitable chemical agent which, on heating to vulcanization or molding temperatures, releases large quantities of gas and thus causes foaming of the composition.

Gaseous sulfurdioxide reacts with 1,1-dimethylhydrazine, N-aminopiperidine, N-aminohomopiperidine, and N-aminomorpholine to form 1:1 adducts. The adducts are formed between the nitrogen atom of the R2N group in the hydrazine and the sulfur atom in sulfurdioxide. Analytical, proton NMR and i.r. spectral data are given.

Some new cyanoacetates were synthesized and characterized. They are precursors for α-cyanoacrylates used as rapidly polymerized, cold-hardening adhesives.

US4160864

An adhesive composition comprising monomeric methyl allyl methylenemalonate is useful for bonding together a wide range of materials.

Alicyclic mono and diacrylates from alpha-pinene and beta-pinene derivatives were synthesised and characterized spectroscopically. They were then compounded in alkyl 2-cyanoacrylate adhesives as crosslinkers. Their effect on the adhesive bond strengths after exposing the adhesive bonds to various temperatures, was studied.

Polyalkyl 2-cyanoacrylates begin to retropolymerize and deteriorate dramatically at temperatures above 80°C. They bond rapidly to the metal surfaces and readily lose strength even at ambient temperatures. These two drawbacks of the cyanoacrylates have made this class of adhesives unpopular as structural adhesives. Several attempts have been made to increase the thermal stability and the stability of the bond between the metal surfaces by adding chemicals like cyclopentadienoates and anhydrides to the cyanoacrylates.

Some alkenyl- and alkinyl-2-cyanoacrylate monomers, possessing adhesive properties were synthesized. The ease of esterification of cyanoacetic acid, the first step of the synthesis, with some alcohols was in the following order:

The tacticity assignments from the literature for the 13C-NMR signals of the side-chain methylene group of poly(ethyl cyanoacrylate) are reversed, and new assignments of the main-chain methylene group are proposed. The assignments were made possible by a combination of DEPT and HETCOR NMR experiments on samples of varying microstructure distributions. The polymer tends toward syndiotacticity, not isotacticity as previously reported. The distribution of stereoisomers fits well to a Bernoulian statistical model.

Polycyanoacrylates were found to be inherently unstable. Even in the absence of a deliberately added strong base, their molecular weights decreased drastically on standing in solution in accord with observations by Ryan and McCann (Makromol Chem Rapid Commun 1996, 17, 217). The initial high molecular weight polymer disappeared over the course of a few hours in solution and was replaced by a much lower molecular weight material.

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