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Tannin as a renewable raw material for adhesive applications: a review

Journal

MATERIALS ADVANCES
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 3365-3388

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1ma00841b

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This article reviews the rapid development and innovation in the field of bio-based adhesives as alternatives for petrochemical adhesives. Tannin, as a renewable resource, has gained increasing attention due to its renewability, sustainability, and lower cost. The article highlights the chemistry of tannin, its usefulness, and its compatibility in synthesizing bio-based adhesives compared to hydrocarbon-derived counterparts. Furthermore, the article discusses tannin as a raw material for preparing different types of adhesives. Further exploration of chemical modification can make tannin a potential candidate to compete with petrochemical-based adhesives.
Considering the limits of petrochemical availability and their toxicity, there has been rapid development and innovation in the field of alternatives for petrochemical adhesives. The carcinogenicity of formaldehyde has reduced the demand for formaldehyde-based wood adhesives, which has resulted in the development of adhesives based on renewable resources. This review article summarizes various works published on bio-derived adhesives focusing on tannin. Increasingly acknowledged renewability, sustainability, lower cost, and chemical modification opportunities make tannin a credible precursor for developing competent bio-based adhesives. Henceforth, the chemistry of tannin, its usefulness, possible chemical modification, and compatibility in an attempt to synthesize bio-based adhesives is also being highlighted and compared with its hydrocarbon-derived counterparts. In addition to this, categories of tannin, and techniques available for their extraction along with their pluses and misuses, have also been explained. Moreover, this review includes a detailed discussion on tannin as a raw material for preparing epoxy, polyurethane, polyethylenimine, and furfuryl-based adhesives. It is expected that by exploring further possibilities of chemical modification, tannin can be a potential candidate that can compete with the petrochemical-based adhesives, thereby paving the way for the advancement of bio-adhesives.

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