4.2 Article

Glucose-lignin-based phenolic resin: an environmentally friendly low-formaldehyde wood adhesive

Journal

PIGMENT & RESIN TECHNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/PRT-12-2022-0150

Keywords

Resins; Low-formaldehyde; Lignin; Glucose; Adhesives

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This study aims to prepare a low-formaldehyde and environmentally friendly glucose-lignin-based phenolic resin. The authors directly used lignin to substitute formaldehyde to prepare lignin-based phenolic resin with urea as formaldehyde absorbent. The introduction of biobased glucose improved the performance of the wood adhesive and reduced free phenol content and curing temperature.
Purpose - This study aims to prepare a low-formaldehyde and environmentally friendly glucose-lignin-based phenolic resin. Design/methodology/approach - The authors directly used lignin to substitute formaldehyde to prepare lignin-based phenolic resin (LPF) with urea as formaldehyde absorbent. To improve the performance of the adhesive, the biobased glucose was introduced and the modified glucose-LPF (GLPF) was obtained. Findings - The results showed that when the replacing amount of lignin to formaldehyde reached 15 Wt.%, the physical properties of the prepared LPF met the Chinese national standard, and the bonding strength increased by 21.9%, from 0.75 to 0.96 MPa, compared with PF. The addition of glucose boost the performance of wood adhesive, for example, the free phenol content of the obtained GLPF was significantly reduced by 79.11%, from 5.60% to 1.17%, the bonding strength (1.19 MPa) of GLPF increased by 19.3% in comparison to LPF and the curing temperature of GLPF decreased by 13.08%. Practical implications - The low-formaldehyde and environmentally friendly GLPF has higher bonding strength and lower curing temperature, which is profitable to industrial application. Social implications - The prepared GLPF has lower free formaldehyde and formaldehyde emission, which is cost-effective and beneficial to human health. Originality/value - The joint work of lignin and glucose provides the wood adhesive with increased bonding strength, decreased free phenol content and reduced curing temperature.

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