Toward UV-Triggered Curing of Solvent-Free Polyurethane Adhesives Based on Castor Oil
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Abstract
An o-nitrobenzyl-protected precursor was used as a
phototrigger for the release of the diamine cadaverine in polyurethane
adhesives based on castor oil as a renewable source of polyol
and organic diisocyanates. This resulted in formulations with suitably
controlled curing by photoactivation. This material shows faster
curing when UV light is applied as compared to curing in the
absence of irradiation, which was in situ monitored by rheological
measurements. In addition, the adhesion performance is superior,
reaching lap shear strength values of up to 4600 kPa, which is
unprecedented for bio-based adhesives. On one hand, the in-depth
chemical characterization with FTIR spectroscopy revealed that the
slow release of cadaverine yields a well-balanced urethane/urea
composition with direct impact on adhesion properties. The
photocured bioadhesive was shown to bond a variety of surfaces, such as polyethylene or even wood. On the other hand, the
direct one-time addition of cadaverine yields a material with approximately the same viscoelastic properties, which were achieved
almost immediately as a consequence of the favored fast formation of urea bonds in detriment of urethanes, however, lacking
adhesion properties.
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Bibliographic citation
Borrero-López, A. M., Guzmán, D. B., González-Delgado, J. A., Arteaga, J. F., Valencia, C., Pischel, U., & Franco, J. M. (2021). Toward UV-Triggered Curing of Solvent-Free Polyurethane Adhesives Based on Castor Oil. In ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering (Vol. 9, Issue 33, pp. 11032–11040). American Chemical Society (ACS). https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c02461














