Hmechem
Plastic Lubricants

Plastic Lubricants in PVC Processing: Internal vs External

·8 min read·
plastic lubricantsPVCPE waxstearic acid

Plastic Lubricants in PVC Processing: Internal vs External

PVC does not melt like most thermoplastics — it gels and fuses through primary particles. Without adequate lubrication, it sticks to metal surfaces or fails to develop sufficient melt strength.

Internal Lubricants

Internal lubricants are compatible with PVC at processing temperatures; they reduce intermolecular friction within the melt.

Stearic acid: Classic internal lubricant; promotes rapid fusion; risk of plate-out at excessive levels. Glyceryl monostearate (GMS): Good internal lubricant with mild external effect; FDA-compliant. Calcium stearate: Dual function as lubricant and acid scavenger.

Typical loading (rigid PVC pipe): 0.3–0.8 phr total internal lubricant.

External Lubricants

External lubricants are incompatible with PVC; they migrate to the melt-metal interface as a release layer.

Polyethylene wax (PE wax): Standard external lubricant for rigid PVC pipe and profiles. Typical loading: 0.3–0.5 phr.

Paraffin wax: Lower cost; limited to low-temperature applications due to high volatility.

Fusion Profile and Lubricant Balance

Formulation problemDiagnosisAdjustment
Slow fusion, melt fractureInsufficient internal lubricantIncrease stearic acid or GMS
Plate-out, die depositsInsufficient external lubricantIncrease PE wax
Poor surface glossInsufficient external lubricantIncrease PE wax or add OA wax

HMEChem supplies both internal and external PVC lubricants including stearic acid, PE wax, OA wax, and specialty lubricant blends.

Need a Sample or Quote?

HMEChem supplies all the chemicals mentioned in this article from qualified Chinese manufacturers. Reply within 24 hours.

Send Inquiry

Stay ahead of the market

Get the latest coating & ink additive insights delivered to your inbox.

TelegramWhatsApp