6 research outputs found
Effect of Fatty Acid Polyunsaturation on Synthesis and Properties of Emulsion Polymers Based on Plant Oil-Based Acrylic Monomers
This study demonstrated that polymerization behavior of plant oil-based acrylic monomers (POBMs) synthesized in one-step transesterification reaction from naturally rich in oleic acid olive, canola, and high-oleic soybean oils is associated with a varying mass fraction of polyunsaturated fatty acid fragments (linoleic (C18:2) and linolenic (C18:3) acid esters) in plant oil. Using miniemulsion polymerization, a range of stable copolymer latexes was synthesized from 60 wt.% of each POBM and styrene to determine the impact of POBM chemical composition (polyunsaturation) on thermal and mechanical properties of the resulted polymeric materials. The unique composition of each plant oil serves as an experimental tool to determine the effect of polyunsaturated fatty acid fragments on POBM polymerization behavior and thermomechanical properties of crosslinked films made from POBM-based latexes. The obtained results show that increasing polyunsaturation in the copolymers results in an enhanced crosslink density of the latex polymer network which essentially impacts the mechanical properties of the films (both Young’s modulus and toughness). Maximum toughness was observed for crosslinked latex films made from 50 wt.% of each POBM in the monomer feed
Non-Conventional Features of Plant Oil-Based Acrylic Monomers in Emulsion Polymerization
International audienceIn recent years, polymer chemistry has experienced an intensive development of a new field regarding the synthesis of aliphatic and aromatic biobased monomers obtained from renewable plant sources. A one-step process for the synthesis of new vinyl monomers by the reaction of direct transesterification of plant oil triglycerides with N-(hydroxyethyl)acrylamide has been recently invented to yield plant oil-based monomers (POBMs). The features of the POBM chemical structure, containing both a polar (hydrophilic) fragment capable of electrostatic interactions, and hydrophobic acyl fatty acid moieties (C15-C17) capable of van der Waals interactions, ensures the participation of the POBMs fragments of polymers in intermolecular interactions before and during polymerization. The use of the POBMs with different unsaturations in copolymerization reactions with conventional vinyl monomers allows for obtaining copolymers with enhanced hydrophobicity, provides a mechanism of internal plasticization and control of crosslinking degree. Synthesized latexes and latex polymers are promising candidates for the formation of hydrophobic polymer coatings with controlled physical and mechanical properties through the targeted control of the content of different POBM units with different degrees of unsaturation in the latex polymers
Non-Conventional Features of Plant Oil-Based Acrylic Monomers in Emulsion Polymerization
International audienc
Plant Oil-Based Acrylic Latexes towards Multisubstrate Bonding Adhesives Applications
To investigate the utility of acrylic monomers from various plant oils in adhesives manufacturing, 25–45 wt. % of high oleic soybean oil-based monomer (HOSBM) was copolymerized in a miniemulsion with commercially applied butyl acrylate (BA), methyl methacrylate (MMA), or styrene (St). The compositions of the resulting ternary latex copolymers were varied in terms of both “soft” (HOSBM, BA) and “rigid” (MMA or St) macromolecular fragments, while total monomer conversion and molecular weight of copolymers were determined after synthesis. For most latexes, results indicated the presence of lower and higher molecular weight fractions, which is beneficial for the material adhesive performance. To correlate surface properties and adhesive performance of HOSBM-based copolymer latexes, contact angle hysteresis (using water as a contact liquid) for each latex-substrate pair was first determined. The data showed that plant oil-based latexes exhibit a clear ability to spread and adhere once applied on the surface of materials differing by polarities, such as semicrystalline polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polypropylene (PP), bleached paperboard (uncoated), and tops coated with a clay mineral paperboard. The effectiveness of plant oil-based ternary latexes as adhesives was demonstrated on PET to PP and coated to uncoated paperboard substrates. As a result, the latexes with high biobased content developed in this study provide promising adhesive performance, causing substrate failure instead of cohesive/adhesive break in many experiments
Free Radical Polymerization Behavior of the Vinyl Monomers from Plant Oil Triglycerides
A one-step
method of plant oil direct transesterification was used
to synthesize new vinyl monomers from sunflower (SFM), linseed (LSM),
soybean (SBM), and olive (OVM) oils. The degree of unsaturation in
plant oil fatty acids was used as a criterion to compare the free
radical polymerization behavior of new monomers. The number-average
molecular weight of plant oil-based homopolymers synthesized in toluene
in the presence of AIBN at 75 °C varies at 11 000–25 000
and decreases as follows: poly(OVM) > poly(SFM) > poly(SBM)
> poly(LSM),
corresponding to increasing degree of unsaturation in the monomers.
Rate of polymerization depends noticeably on the degree of unsaturation
in monomers. Due to the allylic termination, chain propagation coexists
with effective chain transfer during polymerization. The obtained
values of <i>C</i><sub>M</sub> (ratio of chain transfer
and propagation rate constants) depends on monomer structure as follows: <i>C</i><sub>M</sub>(LSM) > <i>C</i><sub>M</sub>(SBM)
> <i>C</i><sub>M</sub>(SFM) > <i>C</i><sub>M</sub>(OVM). <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectroscopy shows that the fraction
of
the reacting allylic atoms does not vary significantly for the synthesized
monomers (7–12%) and is determined entirely by plant oil degree
of unsaturation. The glass transition temperature of homopolymers
[<i>T</i><sub>g</sub> = 4.2 °C for poly(SFM), <i>T</i><sub>g</sub> = −6 °C for poly(SBM)] from new
monomers indicates that varying biobased fragments in copolymers might
considerably change the intermolecular interactions of macromolecules
and their physicochemical properties