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Glycols in polyurethane foam formulations with a starch–oil composite

✍ Scribed by R. L. Cunningham; S. H. Gordon; F. C. Felker; K. Eskins


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
609 KB
Volume
69
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-8995

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✦ Synopsis


A dry starch-oil composite was blended with each of three glycols; ethylene, polyethylene, and propylene, and then reacted with isocyanate to produce polyurethane foams. The liquid glycols permitted the dry composite to blend well with the other ingredients in the foam formulations. Infrared spectra confirmed the presence of urethane structures in the composite-glycol foams. Polyethylene glycol provided a slightly less dense foam than the other glycols in the composite-glycol products. Microscopy showed a greater number of larger cells in the composite-polyurethane glycol foams. Infrared spectra indicated essentially no qualitative differences in the composite-glycol foams with the three glycols. By prestaining starch with toluidene blue and oil with sudan red, the location of the starch and oil components of the milled composite were observed in the composite-propylene glycol foam. Intact flakes of the composite were observed in the foam. An apparent loss of mobility of oil in the composite-polyurethane foam, as evidenced by NMR analysis, is probably due to crosslinking by isocyanate diffusing into the flakes. Both the cell structure and uniformity of blending were improved by using these glycols rather than the polyester polyol described previously.


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✍ R. L. Cunningham; S. H. Gordon; F. C. Felker; K. Eskins 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 429 KB 👁 1 views

A new jet-cooked starch-oil composite has been blended with a polyester polyol and then reacted with isocyanate to give a polyurethane foam. Infrared spectroscopy and microscopy have been used to examine the resultant products. Infrared spectra have shown the products contain the urethane structures