Soy-based Polyurethane Rigid Foam - Research groups
Transcription
Soy-based Polyurethane Rigid Foam - Research groups
Soy-based Polyurethane Rigid Foam Suqin Tan Committee Members: Chris Macosko Tom Hoye Marc Hillmyer University of Minnesota Date: Aug. 3rd, 2010 THESIS DEFENSE 1 Polyurethane Rigid Foam • Excellent insulating property • High strength-to-weight ratio • Durable Production over 3 billion lbs/yr Randall, D.; Lee, Steve. The Polyurethanes Book; John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 2002 2 THESIS DEFENSE How to Make Polyurethane Foam? Blowing Reaction Foam cell structure Urea link Gelling Reaction polyol Physical blowing agent is also used isocyanate Urethane link THESIS DEFENSE 3 Opportunity for Bio-renewable Feedstock Increasing environmental conscious Life Cycle Analysis* • 23% reduction in total energy demand • 61% reduction in non-renewable energy use • 36% less global warming emissions *Wazirzada Y. ‘ Commercialization of Bio-Polymers A Case Study’, Cargill Biobased Polyurethanes, 2009 THESIS DEFENSE 4 Polyol from Soybean Oil Hydroformylation[2] Epoxidation[1] H2, catalyst H2, CO, catalyst MeOH, H2O H2O2 Ozonolysis[3] O3/ O2 NaBH4 1. 2. 3. THESIS DEFENSE Petrovic ZS et.al., US Patent 6,433,121; 2002 Guo A, Demydov D, Zhang W, Petrovic Z. S. J. Polym. Environ. 2002, 10, 49. Petrovic Z. S, Zhang W, Javni I. Biomacromolecules. 2005, 6, 713. 5 Research Goal • Formulate polyurethane rigid (PUR) foam from soy polyol • Match properties of soy-based PUR foams with those of petroleum-based PUR foams • Understand mechanism behind property deficiencies and develop strategies to improve them Soy-based polyol (SBOP) O OH O OMe OH O O O OH OH OH O OMe OMe THESIS DEFENSE 6 Can We Make PUR Foam From Soy Polyol? Foam formulation Foaming steps Chemical Weight (pbw) Polyol (petro / soy) 100 1. Water 1.9 Gelling catalyst 2.1 Polyol Catalysts 2. n-pentane Water Surfactant Blowing catalyst 0.5 Surfactant 1.6 n- pentane 9.6 Isocyanate (ISO index=110) 126.7 3. isocyanate 10-15 seconds 2500 rpm stirrer 800 mL container THESIS DEFENSE 7 Yes! But...Glycerol is Needed Control I Chemical (pbw) Control I SBOP I (w/ glycerol) Polyol (petro/ soy) 100 100 Water 1.9 1.9 glycerol -- 16 Gelling catalyst 2.1 3.7 Blowing catalyst 0.5 1.1 Surfactant 1.6 2.2 n- pentane 9.6 16 Isocyanate (ISO index=110) 126.7 140.8 SBOP I (w/ glycerol) SBOP I (w/o glycerol) ISO index=100 THESIS DEFENSE 8 Foam Properties Comparison Foam Control I 40.3±0.6 SBOP I (w/o glycerol) 61.2±7.9 SBOP I (w/ glycerol) 41.8±0.2 Density (kg/ m3) Tg ( °C) k value (mW/m∙K) Δk* (mW/m∙K) Compressive strength (kPa) Cell size (um) 140±4.4 144±2.4 216±4.4 23.3±0.3 36.3±3.5 22.8±1.2 2.60 N/A 4.62 208 190 206 342±46 poor 300±81 * Δk= k60-k0 By adding glycerol, soy foams have comparable density and k value, much higher Tg and compressive strength, and smaller average cell size THESIS DEFENSE 9 Thermal Conductivity (k value) Aging Foam k value aging test: Sample size: 2.5”*2.5”*2.5” Temperature: 70 °C THESIS DEFENSE 10 Surfactant Cloud point test Surfactant structure: polydimethysiloxane polyether graft copolymer THESIS DEFENSE Surfactant hydrophobicity: 7105>9204>3805>8404 11 Can Surfactant Help? Increasing surfactant hydrophobicity 7105>9204>3805>8404 THESIS DEFENSE Foam k value aging test 12 Foams from Different Surfactants Foam property Control I SBOP I_8404 SBOP I_3805 SBOP I_9204 SBOP I_7105 Density 40.3±0.6 41.8±0.2 43.2±0.1 46.7±0.1 47.0±0.2 Tg ( °C) 144 218 206 208 193 k value 23.3±0.3 22.8± 1.2 25.5±0.5 24.9± 0.7 27.8± 0.6 208 206 173 245 206 342±46 301± 81 271±72 227±59 302±108 (kg/m3) (mW/mK) Compressive Strength (kPa) Cell size (um) Soy foams have higher density and k value with increasing surfactant hydrophobicity THESIS DEFENSE 13 Soy-based Foams from Glycerol Aided Formulation • Results summary – By adding glycerol, soy-based PUR foams had comparable density and k value, much higher Tg and compressive strength, and smaller average cell size • Problem – High glycerol level is not favored (friability, flammability) • Next step – Develop new foam formulation – Partial & complete SBOP substitution THESIS DEFENSE 14 Glycerol Free Route to Make PUR Foams Polyol OH number (mg KOH/g) Molecular Weight (g/mol) Functionality Viscosity (mPa∙s) Acid Value (mg KOH/g) Water content (ppm) Manufacture /Resource Control I Control II Jeffol ® SD-361 Jeffol® FX31-240 360 240 SBOP 240 690 700 1200 4.4 2500 3.0 250 4.4 8900 -- -- 1.7 -- -- 3000 Huntsman Huntsman Experimental (Cargill) THESIS DEFENSE 15 Glycerol Free Formulation New Foam formulation Chemical Weight (pbw) Polyol (petro / soy) 100 Water 2.6 Diethylene glycol 6.0 Gelling catalyst 4.0 Blowing catalyst 1.0 Surfactant 2.0 n- pentane 8.0 Isocyanate (ISO index=125) 130 Control,25% , 50% , 75% , 100% SBOP ISO index=100 THESIS DEFENSE 16 Foam Properties Foam Control II 25% SBOP II 50% SBOP II 75% SBOP II 100% SBOP II Density (kg/m3) 39.5±0.8 39.7±0.9 39.8±1.1 41.3±1.3 46.4±2.0 Tg (°C) 98 107 123 134 142 k value (mW/(m∙K)) 24.4±0.04 -- 25.4±0.14 -- 24.7±0.07 Compressive strength (kPa) 115 -- 138 -- 170 Cell size (um) 431±91 392±84 390±102 375±128 386±102 Soy foams have comparable density and k value, much higher Tg and compressive strength but smaller average cell size THESIS DEFENSE 17 Foam Aging Test Sample size: 2.5”*2.5”*2.5” Aging condition: oven, 70°C Foams from 100% SBOP aged faster than control foams Comparison between experimental and predicted foam aging Modesti M, Lorenzetti A, Dallacoua C. Polym. Eng. Sci. 2004, 44, 2229 THESIS DEFENSE 18 Foam Aging: Different Gas Permeabilities b gas k value (mW/mK) N2 24.6 O2 24.9 CO2 15.3 n-C5H12 13.7 Mean partial pressure of physical blowing agent (245fa), CO2, air and total cell pressure during aging Modesti M, Lorenzetti A, Dallacoua C. Polym. Eng. Sci. 2004, 44, 2229 THESIS DEFENSE 19 Gas Permeation: Thin Film • Polyurethane thin film – eliminate cell structure issue – study gas permeation of polyurethane solid Polyol DEG acetone isocyanate Film cure cut HDPE sheet and aluminum frame THESIS DEFENSE 20 Nitrogen Permeation Barrer is a non-SI unit of gas permeability, 1 Barrer=10-10 (cm3 O2) cm·cm-2 s-1 cmHg-1, here ‘cm-3O2’ is a molar quantity of O2 100 % Soy-based PUR films had much higher N2 permeation THESIS DEFENSE 21 Proposed Mechanism Permeation rate of gases decreases as: • polymer structural symmetry increases • polymer cohesive energy density increases Permeability of polymer films to O2 at 25-30 °C Polymer δ (Cal/cm3)1/2 O2 permeability (Barrer) Polymer δ (Cal/cm3)1/2 O2 permeability (Barrer) 1,4polybutadiene 8.3 191 Polyvinylidene chloride 9.7 (PVC) 0.05 Natural rubber 8.1 5000 1,4polybutadiene 8.3 191 Comyn, J. Polymer Permeability. Elsevier Applied Science Publishers, London and New York, 1985. Hiemenz C. P, Lodge P. T. Polymer Chemistry. CRC Press. 2007. THESIS DEFENSE 22 Soy-based Polyol vs. Petroleum-based Polyol polyol structure comparison Control Mw= 700 g/mol fn= 3.0 SBOP Mw= 1200 g/mol fn= 4.4 THESIS DEFENSE 23 Polymer Cohesive Energy Density: Swelling Test DMF (δ=12.14 (Cal/cm3)1/2) THESIS DEFENSE Qt :mole percent uptake at time t ni:moles of solvent taken up at time t; mi:dry mass of the sample; Q∞ :mole percent uptake at equilibrium. 24 Polymer Solubility Parameter solvent δ (Cal/cm3)1/2 chloroform 9.21 tetrahydrofuran 9.52 Dichloromethane 9.93 Pyridine 10.61 N, Ndimethylformamide 12.14 methanol 14.28 The plot of the equilibrium degree of swelling vs. solvent solubility parameter THESIS DEFENSE 25 Research Summary & Future Direction • PUR foams were made from soy polyol Compared with control foams/films: – all soy foams had comparable density and initial k value, much higher Tg and compressive strength and smaller average cell size – 50% soy foams had similar k value aging 50% soy thin films had comparable N2 permeation – 100% soy foams aged much faster than petro-based foams 100% soy thin film had much higher N2 permeation • Future Work – Proposed mechanism: polymer cohesive energy density • lower polymer cohesive energy density leads to higher N2 permeation for soy-based PUR thin films • introduction of polar side groups into soy polyol to increase polymer cohesive energy density THESIS DEFENSE 26 Acknowledgements • Financial support : • Collaborators: Tim Abraham, Don Ference, Dave Henton, Wei Zhang & BiOH labs (Cargill) • Advisors Chris Macosko & Tom Hoye, Committee members • Macosko research group & polymer group • Undergraduate researchers: Jason Zhang, Darius Jaya • Machine shop, staff and administrative assistants • Family and friends THESIS DEFENSE 27 Questions and Comments THESIS DEFENSE 28 Needle Probe Method (top) scheme of needle probe setup for k value measurements (right) Pulse/temperature measuring circuit THESIS DEFENSE 29 Needle Probe Method Thermal Conductivity Estimation vs. tm 0.7 0.6 0.5 K [W/m-K] 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 2000 7000 12000 17000 22000 tm [mS] k value versus time curve from needle probe measurement THESIS DEFENSE 30 Adiabatic Temperature Rise Original temperature profile (formulation I w/o pentane added) THESIS DEFENSE 31 Adiabatic Temperature Rise Temperature profile comparison for Control A foaming with or without pentane added THESIS DEFENSE 32 Adiabatic Temperature Rise p ( NCO ) Trxn Q C p mT H r , u r Tm Trxn mw m H r , r OH f n Mw M OH C p mT p: isocyanate conversion r : stoichiometric ratio of functional groups, which is unity in this case ∆Tm : temperature rise during foaming measured via thermocouple ∆ Trxn : maximum temperature rise based on an adiabatic reactor Q : total amount of heat generated ∆ Hr (J/g) : heat of reaction, the heat of reaction for urea and urethane formation were taken as –125.5 kJ/mol and –93.9 kJ/mol m (g) : reactant mass Cp (J/g/oC):specific heat capacity of foam, which is 1.8 M (g/mol): molecular weight fn : polyol functionality, the subscripts, u,r, w, OH, and T indicate urea, urethane, water, polyol and total, L. Zhang, Ph. D Thesis, Univeristy of Minnesota, 2008. respectively. THESIS DEFENSE 33 SEM Images (formulation I) Control I SBOP I w/o glycerol THESIS DEFENSE SBOP I w/ glycerol 34 34 Cell Size Analysis ImageJ analysis N. C. Hilyard, A. Cunningham. Low density cellular plastics-Physical basis of behaviour, Chapman & Hall, 1994. THESIS DEFENSE 35 SBOP I_7105 SBOP I_3805 Control I SBOP I_8404 SBOP I_9204 THESIS DEFENSE 36 SBOP I_3805 SBOP I_7105 25.11 mW/mK 43.2 kg/m3 dn=271 um SBOP I_8404 25.87 mW/mK 41.8 kg/m3 dn=300 um 27.19 W/mK 47 kg/m3 dn =302 um control 24.06 W/mK 40.3 kg/m3 dn =342 um SBOP I_9204 26.18 W/mK 46.7 kg/m3 dn =226 um THESIS DEFENSE 37 Cloud Point Test Cool down until clear again Water bath (80°C) 0.1 % surfactant solution (DI water as the solvent) T. Inoue, H. Ohmura, D. Murata. J. Colloid Interface Sci 2003, 258, 374. THESIS DEFENSE 38 Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (formulation I) DMA curves showing G’ (left) and G” (right) as a function of temperature THESIS DEFENSE 39 Tg Determination (formulation I) THESIS DEFENSE 40 25% SBOP II 50% SBOP II Control II 75% SBOP II 100% SBOP II THESIS DEFENSE 41 50% SBOP II 25% SBOP II 75% SBOP II Control II 100% SBOP II THESIS DEFENSE 42 Dynamic Mechanical Analysis (formulation II) DMA curves showing G’ (left) and G” (right) as a function of temperature THESIS DEFENSE 43 Tg Determination (formulation II ) THESIS DEFENSE 44 IR Analysis of Polyurethane Thin Film IR spectrum comparison of freshly made and cured polyurethane thin films: (left) control II, (right) SBOP II. THESIS DEFENSE 45