4.7 Article

Designing New Sustainable Polyurethane Adhesives: Influence of the Nature and Content of Diels-Alder Adducts on Their Thermoreversible Behavior

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14163402

Keywords

reusable adhesive; high reversibility; solvent-based; solvent-free

Funding

  1. Bio Based Industries Joint Undertaking (BBI-JU) [837715]

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In this study, two Diels-Alder (DA) adducts are incorporated into the curing process of polyurethanes to develop new sustainable and functional adhesives. The influence of the nature and content of the DA molecules on the retro-DA (rDA) reaction and its reversibility and cyclability is investigated. The bonding/debonding properties of the adhesives are mainly controlled by the concentration of the DA adducts.
With a view to the development of new sustainable and functional adhesives, two Diels- Alder (DA) adducts are incorporated as a third component into the curing process of solvent-based and solvent-free polyurethanes in this study. The influence of the nature and content of the DA molecules on the retro-DA (rDA) reaction and its reversibility and cyclability is investigated. It is demonstrated that the bonding/debonding properties of the adhesives are mainly controlled by the concentration of the DA adducts, with a minimum thermoreversible bond (TB) content required that depends on the system and the total ratio between all the diols in the formulation. For the solvent-based system, rDA/DA reversibility can be repeated up to similar to 20 times without deterioration, in contrast to the solvent-free system where a gradual loss in the DA network reconstruction efficiency is observed. Despite this limitation, the solvent-free system presents clear advantages from an environmental point of view. The changes observed in the physical properties of these new thermoreversible adhesives are of great relevance for recycling strategies and, in particular, their potential for separating multilayered film packaging materials in order to recycle the individual polymer films involved.

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