4.7 Article

Design and manufacturing of cost-effective tannin-based polyurethane foam as an efficient and reusable absorbent for oil and solvents

Journal

INDUSTRIAL CROPS AND PRODUCTS
Volume 189, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2022.115815

Keywords

Tannin extract; Liquefaction; Polyurethane foam; Adsorption capacity; Recyclability

Funding

  1. National Nature Fund [32101467]
  2. Nature Fund of Jiangsu Province [BK20210619]
  3. Jiangsu Province Key RD Program [BE2019111]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)

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Low-cost, efficient, and renewable tannin-based materials were developed for oil spill clean-ups. The tannin-based foams showed improved adsorption capacities and mechanical properties compared to unmodified foams. The substitution of polyols with tannin extract delayed the degradation temperature and increased thermal stability. This study provides a feasible and sustainable strategy for fabricating biobased materials for oil spill clean-ups.
Developing low-cost, efficient, and renewable polyurethane as an efficient absorbent for oil spill clean-ups is still a challenge. Herein, tannin-based polyether polyol (MTEBP) was synthesized using tannin extract as feedstocks through graft-liquefaction, and then to produce tannin extract-based foams (MTPFs). Benefiting from the better hydrophobicity, and porosity of MTPFs, the adsorption capacities of modified foam with 100 wt%MTEBP (MTPF100) to soybean oil, xylene, dichloromethane, n-hexane and cyclohexane increased by 53.5%, 57.9%, 115.1%, 83.5%, and 97.2%, respectively, and could be recycled stably for 6 times, compared with the unmodified foam (RPUF). In addition, the mechanical properties of MTPFs including compressive and flexural strength are comparable or superior to that of RPUF, which could be ascribed to the good crosslink density and flexible long-polypropylene oxide chain in the structure of MTEBP. Thermal analysis showed that partial or complete substitution of polyols (SA-380) by MTEBP delayed the first onset of degradation of the polyurethane foams, providing better thermal stability. Particularly, the initial degradation temperature of MTPF100 was immensely increased (209.5 degrees C), compared to that of the reference RPUF (121.4 degrees C). This work affords a feasible and sustainable strategy to fabricate the biobased, eco-friendly, high adsorption capacities tannin-based materials for oil spill clean-ups.

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