Reactive diluent


Reactive diluents are substances which reduce the viscosity of a lacquer for processing and become part of the lacquer during its subsequent curing via copolymerization.
Diluents are usually added to lacquers to reduce their viscosity. In thermal cured lacquers, such diluents added are volatile substances which evaporate from the lacquer during drying. In the case of radiation-curing lacquers, those diluents should be avoided. The addition of reactive diluents facilitates the processing of the lacquers, allows the addition of more fillers and improves the wetting behavior on the substrate. If volatile diluents are replaced by reactive diluents, flammability, smell, skin irritation and environmental compatibility can be improved.

Choice of reactive diluent

Since reactive diluents are incorporated into the lacquer and remain in it, they influence not only the viscosity of the uncured lacquer but also its physical properties after curing. Therefore, the choice of the reactive diluent has an influence on:
Reactive diluents used are low-viscosity, mono-, bi- or polyfunctional monomers or oligomers. In general, several different monomers are combined so that one monomer can compensate for the undesired properties of another monomer. Monofunctional monomers offer a low viscosity, but are quite volatile and tend to smell. With an increasing number of functional groups of a monomer, its volatility decreases while viscosity and crosslinking of the final varnish increase.
Styrene, epoxides and acrylates are frequently used as reactive diluents.