Origin of Impurities Formed
in a Polyurethane Production
Chain. Part 2: A Route to the Formation of Colored Impurities
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Abstract
The quality of methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI)
products,
which are valuable feedstocks in the industrial manufacture of polyurethanes,
can be compromised by the presence of color, presumed to arise from
trace impurities. One undesired branch in the synthesis chain originates
with phosgenation of diaryl ureas, formed from reactions between aryl
isocyanates and polyamine precursors. Subsequent key steps include,
(i) breakdown of the primary compounds, substituted chloroformamidine-<i>N</i>-carbonyl chlorides (CCC), to give aryl isocyanide dichlorides,
ArNCCl<sub>2</sub>, (ii) an apparent equilibrium connecting CCC with
aryl carbodiimides, and (iii) the thermolysis of ArNCCl<sub>2</sub> in the presence of MDI. Color formation is associated directly with
the last process; it involves several events, including HCl elimination
from reaction of ArNCCl<sub>2</sub> and MDI, formation of carbon-centered
radicals, and a contribution from oxidation at the methylene bridge