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jkn October 25th 20 11:19 AM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

My question is: Can 'PVA glue'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) also be used for all of the sealing uses that are discussed here, or should I only use 'Contractors PVA'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) for these purposes? I realise there is a cost difference, its the functional difference I am interested in.

Thanks a lot, Jon N


The Natural Philosopher[_2_] October 25th 20 12:03 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)


Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate

My question is: Can 'PVA glue'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) also be used for all of the sealing uses that are discussed here, or should I only use 'Contractors PVA'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) for these purposes? I realise there is a cost difference, its the functional difference I am interested in.

Thanks a lot, Jon N


The sealant stuff is more dilute and a lot cheaper than the glue
otherwise there is zero difference IME


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survival, to indulging in navel gazing and faux moral investigations
into what the world ought to be, whilst we fail utterly to deal with
what it actually is.


jkn October 25th 20 12:19 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:

https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive

{{{
Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for reversibility and remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate adhesive, Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more reversible than PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper glues and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the emulsion polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile glaze, binding agent for the surface processing of paper.
}}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution differences

newshound October 25th 20 01:05 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On 25/10/2020 12:19, jkn wrote:
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:

https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive

{{{
Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for reversibility and remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate adhesive, Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more reversible than PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper glues and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the emulsion polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile glaze, binding agent for the surface processing of paper.
}}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution differences


Poly vinyl alcohol is soluble in water, poly vinyl acetate is not.

I am pretty sure that the "industrial" stuff will contain both, the
"domestic" might just be an emulsion of the acetate, or might have a
much lower proportion of the alcohol.

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] October 25th 20 01:08 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On 25/10/2020 13:05, newshound wrote:
On 25/10/2020 12:19, jkn wrote:
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural
Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I
have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from
Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around
the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial
version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers,
supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different
chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA
to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)
Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:


https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive


{{{
Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for reversibility and
remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate adhesive,
Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more reversible than
PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be
used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper glues
and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the emulsion
polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile glaze, binding
agent for the surface processing of paper.
}}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make
children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution differences


Poly vinyl alcohol is soluble in water, poly vinyl acetate is not.

I am pretty sure that the "industrial" stuff will contain both, the
"domestic" might just be an emulsion of the acetate, or might have a
much lower proportion of the alcohol.


They tend to change into each other anyway.

--
Gun Control: The law that ensures that only criminals have guns.

Fredxx[_3_] October 25th 20 04:32 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On 25/10/2020 12:19:55, jkn wrote:
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural
Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer.
I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought
from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects
around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial
version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers,
supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood
glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different
chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's
PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate* - Contractors PVA sealer: Poly
Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:

https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive

{{{ Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for
reversibility and remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate
adhesive, Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more
reversible than PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be
used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper
glues and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the
emulsion polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile
glaze, binding agent for the surface processing of paper. }}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make
children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution
differences


This is something I have looked into as well and find the subject
confusing. Many recipes mention Elmer's glue which according to:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_acetate
is Polyvinyl Acetate. The wiki entry for Elmer's glue isn't helpful.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyvinyl_alcohol
says, "PVA is prepared by hydrolysis of polyvinyl acetate", which if
you look up is generally with Sodium Hydroxide.

Most slime recipes suggest borax, or sodium carbonate or sodium
sesquicarbonate.

I'm therefore wondering if the glue recipes are actually where start off
with PolyVinyl Acetate and end up with PolyVinyl Alcohol.

To confuse things further I believe the PVA from building type merchants
is PolyVinyl Acetate with PolyVinyl Alcohol as a thickener.

BICBW


TimW October 25th 20 09:21 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On 25/10/2020 12:19, jkn wrote:
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:

https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive

{{{
Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for reversibility and remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate adhesive, Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more reversible than PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper glues and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the emulsion polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile glaze, binding agent for the surface processing of paper.
}}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution differences


I had no idea. I am working my way through a large pot of cheap building
PVA using it as wood glue. It seems a bit runny, it's nice and slow to
go off, and obv it's soluble so only for dry indoor use. Is there
something wrong with it?
TW

jkn October 25th 20 10:16 PM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 9:21:43 PM UTC, TimW wrote:
On 25/10/2020 12:19, jkn wrote:
On Sunday, October 25, 2020 at 12:03:30 PM UTC, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 25/10/2020 11:19, jkn wrote:
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)
Ni. Its just dilute Poly Vinyl Acetate


Not true, I think. See eg:

https://www.preservationequipment.co...cohol-Adhesive

{{{
Polyvinyl alcohol is extremely soluble in water for reversibility and remains flexible as it ages.

Also known as PVA, not to be confused with Polyvinyl Acetate adhesive, Polyvinyl alcohol adhesive is said to be somewhat more reversible than PVAc (polyvinyl acetate).

Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) liquid 15 % in demineralised water. Can be used for: Modification of dispersion glues, manufacture of paper glues and glues which can be remoistened. Protective gel for the emulsion polymerization, raw material for finishing and textile glaze, binding agent for the surface processing of paper.
}}}

Also see my evidence that only 'PVA Glue' can be used to make children's slime - and it's not just because of any dilution differences

I had no idea. I am working my way through a large pot of cheap building
PVA using it as wood glue. It seems a bit runny, it's nice and slow to
go off, and obv it's soluble so only for dry indoor use. Is there
something wrong with it?
TW


Hi Tim
not quite sure what you are asking...

I know that you can use the 'contractors PVA' as a glue - that's partly what it is sold for, after all. As well as a sealer I have also used it as wood glue and for bookbinding.

My question was more the other way round - using the 'Wood Glue PVA' as a sealer - and also the more general question about the chemical differences between the two types.

J^n

Brian Gaff \(Sofa\) October 26th 20 08:04 AM

PVA, and 'The Other' PVA
 
You mean it does not mean Pumpkins Via Air?
Brian

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Note this Signature is meaningless.!
"jkn" wrote in message
...
Hi all - slightly stupid question perhaps...

I see plenty of reference here re. the use of 'PVA' as a sealer. I have some
myself, a 5L container of 'Contractors PVA' bought from Toolstation or
similar and used for a few general projects around the house.

Until recently I thought that this PVA was just an industrial version of the
same "PVA glue" you can buy in stationers, supermarkets etc, as a paper
glue, and in DIY shops as a wood glue.

But I now realise that they have (or tend to have) different chemical
formulations. For a start, you can't use Contractor's PVA to make children's
slime. Disaster!

Looking into this a bit further:

- PVA glue: Poly Vinyl *Acetate*
- Contractors PVA sealer: Poly Vinyl *Alcohol* (I think)

My question is: Can 'PVA glue'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) also be used for all of
the sealing uses that are discussed here, or should I only use 'Contractors
PVA'(Polyvinyl Alcohol) for these purposes? I realise there is a cost
difference, its the functional difference I am interested in.

Thanks a lot, Jon N




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