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PVC is used
extensively in sewage pipe due to its low cost, chemical resistance and ease of
jointing
PVC's relatively
low cost, biological and chemical resistance and workability have resulted in
it being used for a wide variety of applications. It is used for sewerage
pipes and other pipe applications where cost or vulnerability to corrosion limit
the use of metal. With the addition of impact modifiers and stabilizers,
it has become a popular material for window and door frames.
By adding plasticizers, it can become flexible enough to be used in cabling
applications as a wire insulator. It has been used in many other
applications. PVC demand is likely to increase at an average annual rate of
3.9% over the next years.
Pipes
Roughly half of
the world's polyvinyl chloride resin manufactured annually is used for
producing pipes for municipal and industrial applications. In the water
distribution market it accounts for 66% of the market in the US, and in
sanitary sewer pipe applications, it accounts for 75%. Its light weight,
low cost, and low maintenance make it attractive. However, it must be carefully
installed and bedded to ensure longitudinal cracking and overbelling does not
occur. Additionally, PVC pipes can be fused together using various solvent
cements, or heat-fused (butt-fusion process, similar to joining HDPE pipe),
creating permanent joints that are virtually impervious to leakage.
In February, 2007
the California Building Standards Code was updated to approve the use of chlorinated
polyvinyl chloride (CPVC) pipe for use in residential water supply piping
systems. CPVC has been a nationally accepted material in the US since
1982; California, however, has permitted only limited use since 2001. The
Department of Housing and Community Development prepared and certified an environmental
impact statement resulting in a recommendation that the Commission adopt
and approve the use of CPVC. The Commission's vote was unanimous and CPVC has
been placed in the 2007 California Plumbing Code.
In the United
States and Canada, PVC pipes account for the largest majority of pipe
materials used in buried municipal applications for drinking water distribution
and wastewater mains.Buried PVC pipes in both water and sanitary
sewer applications that are 4 inches (100 mm) in diameter and larger are
typically joined by means of a gasket-sealed joint. The most common type of
gasket utilized in North America is a metal reinforced elastomer, commonly
referred to as a Rieber sealing system.
Electric
cables
PVC is commonly
used as the insulation on electrical cables; PVC used for this
purpose needs to be plasticized.