PVC is a low-cost material used in a wide variety of applications and industries. Capable of performing up to 140 F, PVC offers resistance to mild acids, alkalis, and solvents. PVC can be found in a wide range of colors. PVC is a thermoplastic material, allowing it to be heated to its melting point, cooled, and reheated again without significant degradation.
Commonly referred to as “vinyl,” PVC often replaces traditional building materials like wood, metal, concrete, rubber, and ceramics; it is used to make flooring, windows, siding, roofing, and decks—and is particularly useful in pipes due to its strength, low cost, and resistance to build-up, corrosion, or breakage. It is also used in healthcare, electronics, automobile manufacturing, packaging, and other sectors, in products such as blood bags, tubing, wires, cable insulation, windshield system components, signs, shrink wrap, etc.
Research demonstrates that PVC effectively protects the environment in terms of low greenhouse gas emissions and conservation of energy.