Flexible Polyurethane Foams Modified with Novel Coconut Monoglycerides-Based Polyester Polyols

  • Christine Joy M. Omisol
  • , Blessy Joy M. Aguinid
  • , Gerson Y. Abilay
  • , Dan Michael Asequia
  • , Tomas Ralph Tomon
  • , Karyl Xyrra Sabulbero
  • , Daisy Jane Erjeno
  • , Carlo Kurt Osorio
  • , Shashwa Usop
  • , Roberto Malaluan
  • , Gerard Dumancas
  • , Eleazer P. Resurreccion
  • , Alona Lubguban
  • , Glenn Apostol
  • , Henry Siy
  • , Arnold C. Alguno
  • , Arnold Lubguban

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Coconut oil, a low-molecular-weight vegetable oil, is virtually unutilized as a polyol material for flexible polyurethane foam (FPUF) production due to the high-molecular-weight polyol requirement of FPUFs. The saturated chemistry of coconut oil also limits its compatibility with widely used polyol-forming processes, which mostly rely on the unsaturation of vegetable oil for functionalization. Existing studies have only exploited this resource in producing low-molecular-weight polyols for rigid foam synthesis. In this present work, high-molecular-weight polyester polyols were synthesized from coconut monoglycerides (CMG), a coproduct of fatty acid production from coconut oil, via polycondensation at different mass ratios of CMG with 1:5 glycerol:phthalic anhydride. Characterization of the CMG-based polyol (CMGPOL) products showed number-average molecular weights between 1997 and 4275 g/mol, OH numbers between 77 and 142 mg KOH/g, average functionality between 4.8 and 5.8, acid numbers between 4.49 and 23.56 mg KOH/g, and viscosities between 1.27 and 89.57 Pa·s. The polyols were used to synthesize the CMGPOL-modified PU foams (CPFs) at 20 wt % loading. The modification of the foam formulation increased the monodentate and bidentate urea groups, shown using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, that promoted microphase separation in the foam matrix, confirmed using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The implications of the structural change to foam morphology and open cell content were investigated using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) and gas pycnometer. The density of the CPFs decreased, while a significant improvement in their tensile and compressive properties was observed. Also, the CPFs exhibited different resiliency with a correlation to microphase separation. These findings offer a new sustainable polyol raw material that can be used to modify petroleum-based foam and produce flexible foams with varying properties that can be tailored to meet specific requirements.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4497-4512
Number of pages16
JournalACS Omega
Volume9
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 30 2024

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