4.7 Review

Renewable Polyurethanes from Sustainable Biological Precursors

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 5, Pages 1770-1794

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01610

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DOE [DE-EE0008246, DE-EE0009295]
  2. BASF California Research Alliance

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The scientific community is actively searching for renewable alternatives to petroleum-based products, with a focus on utilizing resources like vegetable oils, algae oils, and polysaccharides to develop sustainable materials with improved carbon footprints. Incorporating renewable content into polymer materials, especially polyurethanes, shows increasing and realistic potential for reducing environmental impacts.
Due to the depletion of fossil fuels, higher oil prices, and greenhouse gas emissions, the scientific community has been conducting an ongoing search for viable renewable alternatives to petroleum-based products, with the anticipation of increased adaptation in the coming years. New academic and industrial developments have encouraged the utilization of renewable resources for the development of ecofriendly and sustainable materials, and here, we focus on those advances that impact polyurethane (PU) materials. Vegetable oils, algae oils, and polysaccharides are included among the major renewable resources that have supported the development of sustainable PU precursors to date. Renewable feedstocks such as algae have the benefit of requiring only sunshine, carbon dioxide, and trace minerals to generate a sustainable biomass source, offering an improved carbon footprint to lessen environmental impacts. Incorporation of renewable content into commercially viable polymer materials, particularly PUs, has increasing and realistic potential. Biobased polyols can currently be purchased, and the potential to expand into new monomers offers exciting possibilities for new product development. This Review highlights the latest developments in PU chemistry from renewable raw materials, as well as the various biological precursors being employed in the synthesis of thermoset and thermoplastic PUs. We also provide an overview of literature reports that focus on biobased polyols and isocyanates, the two major precursors to PUs.

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