| Plastic pipes are increasingly used for pressure 
                                applications such as potable water supply etc. 
                                Higher pressure ratings, particularly of PE pipes, 
                                have been increasingly gaining higher market share. 
                                For instance, most of the recent PE pipes fall 
                                in the category of P100 pressure ratings. To meet 
                                the requirements of enhanced pressure rating, 
                                weathering is the most crucial property primarily 
                                dependent on the quality of Carbon black. All 
                                the major Carbon black suppliers have been developing 
                                improved grades. The critical requirements of 
                                Carbon black are:  Long-term  Long-term 
                                weatherability The end product is required by utility companies 
                                to provide long service life without failure, 
                                despite being exposed to ultraviolet light. This 
                                requires very fine prime particles, which present 
                                more surfaces to incident light, and hence have 
                                greater UV light absorbing efficiency than a coarser 
                                particle size.
  Extremely  Extremely 
                                low levels of moisture absorption Compounds containing carbon black usually 
                                absorb moisture when exposed to air. This can 
                                create processing problems, surface defects or 
                                internal cavities in the finished part. The high 
                                purity of the carbon black grades developed for 
                                this application has resulted in very low moisture 
                                absorption during the compounding process.
  Dispersability  Dispersability This performance measure depends primarily on 
                                the fundamental characteristics of carbon black 
                                and relates to the attractive force needed to 
                                separate the agglomerates into discrete carbon 
                                black aggregates. It is also an indicator of the 
                                relative yields that can be achieved on compounding 
                                equipment with different carbon black grades. 
                                The P-types show much better dispersability than 
                                a conventional grade, resulting in better wetting 
                                with the polymer and subsequent de-agglomeration.
 
 
  Microscopic  Microscopic 
                                dispersion Undispersed carbon black agglomerates in the pipe 
                                wall can lead to premature failure and also reduce 
                                fluid flow properties. These problems are recognised 
                                in the industry, and most standards for pressure 
                                pipes specify a microscopic dispersion rating 
                                of no greater than 3 under ISO 11420, NFT51 - 
                                142. Conventional blacks typically rate between 
                                5 and 6.
  Chemical  Chemical 
                                cleanliness Chemical impurities, particularly sulphur, ash 
                                and toluene extract, when present in the compounds 
                                used to make pipes for drinking water, can impart 
                                unpleasant tastes or odours. All carbon blacks 
                                include some residues of these materials, but 
                                in the P-type grades the amounts have been greatly 
                                reduced. For example, sulphur content - typically 
                                around 10,000 ppm in a conventional black - is 
                                some 600 ppm in the new grades.
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