4.7 Article

Foamed Phase Change Materials Based on Recycled Polyethylene/Paraffin Wax Blends

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13121987

Keywords

phase change materials; foams; paraffin wax; recycled polyethylene; micro-computed tomography; dynamic mechanical analysis

Funding

  1. Qatar National Research Fund (A Member of the Qatar Foundation) [13S-0127-200177]
  2. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic-DKRVO [RP/CPS/2020/003]

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Foamed phase-change materials (FPCMs) were prepared using recycled linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) blended with 30 wt.% of paraffin wax (PW) and foamed by 1,1 '-azobiscarbamide. The resulting foams demonstrated a stable porous structure, high porosity, and thermal conductivity, as well as stability during heating/cooling cycles. The study also confirmed the phase change capabilities and mechanical stability of the FPCMs, as well as the long-term release of paraffin wax from the samples.
Foamed phase-change materials (FPCMs) were prepared using recycled linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) blended with 30 wt.% of paraffin wax (PW) and foamed by 1,1 '-azobiscarbamide. The protection of pores' collapse during foaming process was insured through chemical cross-linking by organic peroxide prior foaming. This work represents one of very few attempts for a preparation of polymeric phase change foams without a use of micro-encapsulated phase change component leading to the enhancement of the real PCM component (PW) within a final product. The porous structure of fabricated foams was analyzed using micro-computed tomography, and direct observation, and reconstruction of the internal structure was investigated. The porosity of FPCMs was about 85-87 vol.% and resulting thermal conductivity 0.054-0.086 W/m center dot K. Differential Scanning Calorimetry was used to determine the specific enthalpies of melting (22.4-25.1 J/g) what is the latent heat of materials utilized during a heat absorption. A stability of samples during 10 heating/cooling cycles was demonstrated. The phase change changes were also investigated using the dynamic mechanical analysis from 0 degrees to 65 degrees C during the 10 cycles, and the mechanical stability of the system and phase-change transition were clearly confirmed, as proved by DSC. Leaching test revealed a long-term release of PW (around 7% of its original content) from samples which were long term stored at temperatures over PW melting point. This is the usual problem concerning polymer/wax blends. The most common, industrially feasible solution is a lamination of products, for instance by aluminum foils. Finally, the measurement of the heat flow simulating the real conditions shows that samples containing PW decrease the energy passing through the sample from 68.56 to 34.88 kJ center dot m(-2). In this respect, FPCMs provide very effective double functionality, firstly common thermal insulators, and second, as the heat absorbers acting through melting of the PW and absorbing the excessive thermal energy during melting. This improves the heat protection of buildings and reduces temperature fluctuations within indoor spaces.

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