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The differences between the use of ETFE and PTFE materials in the XHX series centrifugal pumps of the ATACH brandTime:2026-04-20 The magnetic drive chemical centrifugal pump of the ATACH brand uses CFR-ETFE material. Compared with the commonly used PVDF material in the market, what are the main advantages of ETFE? ETFE (ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene copolymer) and PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride) both belong to fluorine plastics, but they differ significantly in terms of chemical structure, physical properties, processing methods, and application fields. 1. Chemical Structure • ETFE: It is formed by alternating copolymerization of ethylene (—CH₂—CH₂—) and tetrafluoroethylene (—CF₂—CF₂—), with the repeating unit being —CH₂—CH₂—CF₂—CF₂—. • PVDF: It is composed of polyvinylidene fluoride (—CH₂—CF₂—) through either homopolymerization or a small amount of copolymerization. The repeating unit is —CH₂—CF₂—, arranged alternately. The structural differences result in ETFE having higher rigidity and crystallinity, while PVDF possesses piezoelectricity and thermoelectricity due to hydrogen bonds . 2. Thermal Properties
3. Mechanical and Physical Properties • Strength and Toughness: ETFE: Tensile strength up to 46 MPa, elongation at break up to 300%, superior impact resistance compared to PVDF. PVDF: High tensile strength, among the best in fluoroplastics for wear resistance and creep resistance, but slightly less toughness than ETFE. • Density: ETFE density significantly lower than PTFE, FEP, etc.; PVDF density is 1.77–1.80 g/cm³. • Transparency: ETFE is a highly transparent material (transmittance > 95%), known as "soft glass"; PVDF is usually semi-transparent or white. 4. Electrical Properties • ETFE: Low dielectric constant (2.3–2.6), low loss, is an excellent electrical insulating material. • PVDF: High dielectric constant (6–8), has piezoelectricity and thermoelectricity, suitable for sensors. 5. Flame Retardancy and Chemical Stability • Flame Retardancy: The limit oxygen index of PVDF (44–46%) is higher than that of ETFE (30–31%), making it more flame-resistant. • Resistant to Solvents: PVDF can be dissolved in polar solvents such as acetone and THF; ETFE is almost insoluble at room temperature and only partially soluble in diisobutyl adipate and other substances at high temperatures. • Chemical Resistance: Both are resistant to acids, alkalis, and salt fog. However, PTFE/FEP/PFA have better chemical resistance, while PVDF is slightly inferior. 6. Processing Methods • ETFE: Melt-processable (extrusion, injection molding, spraying), supports welding. • PVDF: Can be processed by methods such as extrusion, injection molding, and solution coating, offering high process flexibility. 7. Typical Application Fields • ETFE: Architectural membrane structures (such as "Water Cube" and "Bird's Nest"); High-performance wire and cable insulation (especially X-ETFE for high-speed cables); Inner linings for chemical equipment, semiconductor components. • PVDF: Positive electrode binder for lithium batteries (accounting for approximately 90%); Weather-resistant coatings (for exterior walls and roofs, with a lifespan of over 30 years); Chemical pipelines, pumps and valves, water treatment membranes, piezoelectric sensors. Summary Comparison Table
Selection Suggestions: If you need a material with high light transmittance, light weight, and strong structural properties (such as building membranes), choose ETFE; if you need a weather-resistant coating, electrochemical stability, or piezoelectric function (such as lithium batteries, sensors), choose PVDF. |