A closed loop for polyurethane biofoams designed in line with the European Green Deal

Published: 17 March 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/3mj9jr8xzc.1
Contributor:
Maria Kurańska

Description

Glycolysis is an efficient chemical degradation method allowing depolymerization of thermosetting rigid polyurethane foams into reusable monomers and oligomers. This study looks into a chemolysis of polyurethane biofoams containing different amounts of biopolyol (25-100%) in the polyol premix. Increasing the biopolyol content in a foam has a positive effect on the viscosity of the rebiopolyol obtained as a result of the chemolysis reaction. As the biopolyol content increases, the viscosity decreases from 56,000 mPas (foam subjected to chemolysis without biopolyol) to 4,400 mPa·s, which is by over 90%. The foaming process was not affected in any significant way by different chemical structures of the rebiopolyols, as confirmed by, among others, FTIR and MALDI-TOF. The content of rebiopolyol in the system had a significant effect on the course of the foaming process, regardless the rebiopoyol structure. The rebiopolyol chemical structure has a significant impact on the content of closed cells of the newly- produced biofoams. The foams containing the rebiopolyols derived from the foams having more than 50% of polyol were characterized by the highest degree of cell openness. The content of closed cells had a direct impact on the mechanical properties. The lower the closed cells content, the worse the compression strength. However, it should be noted that open-cell foams are finding more and more applications. Thus, the effect observed in this study seems to be leading in a promising direction for the development of open-cell biofoams with the participation of rebiopolyols.

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Institutions

Politechnika Krakowska im Tadeusza Kosciuszki

Categories

Polyurethane, Foam, Foaming, Polyol Pathway

Funding

National Science Center

UMO-2021/43/D/ST5/01222

Licence