4.6 Article

Polyurethane/n-Octadecane Phase-Change Microcapsules via Emulsion Interfacial Polymerization: The Effect of Paraffin Loading on Capsule Shell Formation and Latent Heat Storage Properties

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16196460

Keywords

phase-change materials; encapsulation; interfacial polymerization; polyisocyanate; elastic polyurethane; thermoregulating paint

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Organic phase-change materials (PCMs) have the potential for developing advanced thermoregulation and responsive energy systems due to their high latent heat capacity and thermal reliability. In this study, organic PCM n-Octadecane was encapsulated into polyurethane capsules, and the effects of different n-Octadecane feedings on shell formation, capsule structure, and latent heat storage properties were investigated. The results showed that the shell thickness decreased and the latent heat storage capacity increased with increasing n-Octadecane feeding.
Organic phase-change materials (PCMs) hold promise in developing advanced thermoregulation and responsive energy systems owing to their high latent heat capacity and thermal reliability. However, organic PCMs are prone to leakages in the liquid state and, thus, are hardly applicable in their pristine form. Herein, we encapsulated organic PCM n-Octadecane into polyurethane capsules via polymerization of commercially available polymethylene polyphenylene isocyanate and polyethylene glycol at the interface oil-in-water emulsion and studied how various n-Octadecane feeding affected the shell formation, capsule structure, and latent heat storage properties. The successful shell polymerization and encapsulation of n-Octadecane dissolved in the oil core was verified by confocal microscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. The mean capsule size varied from 9.4 to 16.7 mu m while the shell was found to reduce in thickness from 460 to 220 nm as the n-Octadecane feeding increased. Conversely, the latent heat storage capacity increased from 50 to 132 J/g corresponding to the growth in actual n-Octadecane content from 25% to 67% as revealed by differential scanning calorimetry. The actual n-Octadecane content increased non-linearly along with the n-Octadecane feeding and reached a plateau at 66-67% corresponded to 3.44-3.69 core-to-monomer ratio. Finally, the capsules with the reasonable combination of structural and thermal properties were evaluated as a thermoregulating additive to a commercially available paint.

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