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Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?
Oct . 07, 2025 12:15 Back to list

Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?


Polyviny Alcohol (PVA): what buyers are really asking in 2025

When procurement teams ping me about polyviny alcohol, the questions tend to be refreshingly practical: Will it dissolve cleanly? Can we hit the right viscosity window without baby-sitting the tank? And yes—how stable is it in the real world? I’ve spent a fair chunk of time on plant floors and in labs with PVA, and—surprisingly—it’s the boring details that separate smooth runs from frantic midnight calls.

Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?

What it is (and why it still matters)

polyviny alcohol is a water-soluble, odorless white flake/floc/powder polymer. It dissolves in hot water (≈95°C), barely in DMSO, and not in common organics like benzene or acetone. In practice, that makes it a go-to backbone for emulsifiers, paper coatings, strong-but-clean adhesives, warp sizing, and as a precursor to polyvinyl acetals (think fuel-resistant parts and PVB-like applications). The current trend? Higher-solids mixing, cleaner ash, and tight hydrolysis control for repeatable film performance.

Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?

How it’s made: quick process walk-through

  • Materials: vinyl acetate monomer (VAM), initiator, alcohol (for saponification), deionized water.
  • Methods: polymerize VAM to PVAc → alcoholysis/saponification to convert acetate groups to hydroxyls → wash/neutralize → dry/mill to targeted particle size.
  • Testing standards: ISO 527/ASTM D882 for tensile film data; JIS K 6726/GB/T 12008.5 for resin properties; ASTM E96 for water vapor transmission; ASTM D570 for water absorption.
  • Service life: sealed resin typically 24 months if dry/cool; finished films/coatings vary widely—many users report stable performance 6–24 months depending on humidity and formulation.
  • Industries: packaging films, paper & board, construction mortars, textiles, 3D printing binders, cosmetic bases, seed-coating, ceramic binders.
Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?

Typical product specs (real-world ranges)

Property Typical Range Test/Standard
Degree of hydrolysis 87–89% (partially) or 98–99% (fully) JIS K 6726 / GB/T 12008.5
Degree of polymerization (DP) ≈500–3000 (grade dependent) Manufacturer method
Viscosity (4% aq., 20°C) 5–60 mPa·s Brookfield/ISO 2555
Volatiles ≤5% GB/T 12008.5
Ash content ≤0.5% ISO 3451
pH (4% solution) 5.0–7.5 JIS K 6726

Note: values are indicative; real-world use may vary with water quality, shear, and heat history.

Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?

Applications that keep coming up

  • Paper & packaging: surface sizing and oil/grease barrier layers (many customers say partially hydrolyzed grades wet out more forgivingly).
  • Adhesives: bookbinding, woodworking, label glues—clean films, good green tack.
  • Textiles: warp sizing; easy desizing helps wastewater targets.
  • Chemical intermediates: polyvinyl acetal formation for fuel-resistant parts.
  • Construction: redispersible polymer mortar blends as a binder aid.

Compliance: RoHS/REACH-friendly by design; food-contact suitability depends on region and grade—always check the certificate pack.

Vendor snapshot (apples-to-apples, as much as possible)

Vendor Hydrolysis/DP Range Certs Lead Time Customization
Tangzhi (Hebei, China) 87–99% / DP ≈500–3000 ISO 9001; RoHS/REACH ≈10–20 days ex-works Viscosity tuning, particle size, packaging (20–25 kg; big bag)
Vendor A (SE Asia) 88–99% / DP ≈600–2500 ISO 9001 ≈3–5 weeks Limited viscosity options
Vendor B (EU) 88–99% / DP ≈500–3000 ISO 9001; Food-contact on select grades ≈2–4 weeks EU; longer export Film-grade focus; premium pricing
Polyviny Alcohol: High-Purity, Water-Soluble—Need Supply?

Case notes and field feedback

Paper mill in the Middle East swapped to a 24 mPa·s, 88% hydrolysis polyviny alcohol and reported smoother curtain-coating and 8–10% lower foam incidents (ASTM E96 WVTR improved ≈6%). A textile line in VN went fully hydrolyzed to improve film strength; tensile by ISO 527 rose ≈12% at same coat weight, with easier wash-off—honestly not what we expected, but water chemistry helped.

Buying checklist (quick but useful)

  • Define dissolution conditions: tank size, shear, water hardness, and target solids.
  • Pick hydrolysis level for solubility/film needs; choose DP for viscosity and strength.
  • Ask for batch CoA plus JIS/GB test references; request ASTM D882 film strip data if you’re layering.
  • Confirm shelf life, pallets per container111, and moisture-barrier packaging.

Supplier note: Tangzhi New Materials, Room 2308, Dongsheng Plaza 2, No. 508 Zhongshan East Road, Chang’an District, Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China. If you’re chasing a specific polyviny alcohol curve (say, 12–14 mPa·s at 4% and low ash), ask for a pilot lot—they do custom viscosity blends.

References

  1. JIS K 6726: Testing methods for poly(vinyl alcohol), Japanese Standards Association.
  2. GB/T 12008.5: Polyvinyl alcohol resin—Specifications and test methods, Standardization Administration of China.
  3. ASTM D882: Standard Test Method for Tensile Properties of Thin Plastic Sheeting, ASTM International.
  4. ISO 527: Plastics—Determination of tensile properties, International Organization for Standardization.
  5. ASTM E96: Water Vapor Transmission of Materials, ASTM International.
  6. ASTM D570: Standard Test Method for Water Absorption of Plastics, ASTM International.

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