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Influence of Carboxylic Acid Structure on the Kinetics of Polyurethane Foam Acidolysis to Recycled Polyol

Journal of Food Biochemistry 2024 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Zach Westman, Baoyuan Liu, Kelsey Richardson, Madeleine Davis, Dingyuan Lim, Alan L. Stottlemyer, Christopher S. Letko, Nasim Hooshyar, Vojtěch Vlček, Phillip Christopher, Mahdi M. Abu‐Omar

Summary

Researchers systematically studied how the structure of dicarboxylic acids affects the speed of chemically recycling polyurethane foam, finding that acids with more closely spaced carboxyl groups react faster and that a shrinking-core kinetic model accurately describes the process, offering practical guidance for designing efficient closed-loop polyurethane recycling schemes.

Polymers

Closed-loop recycling of plastics is needed to bridge the gap between the material demands imposed by a growing global population and the depletion of nonrenewable petroleum feedstocks. Here, we examine chemical recycling of polyurethane foams (PUFs), the sixth most produced polymer in the world, through PUF acidolysis via dicarboxylic acids (DCAs) to release recyclable polyols. Acidolysis enables recycling of the polyol component of PUFs to high-quality materials, and while the influence of DCA structure on recycled PUF quality has been reported, there are no reports that examine the influence of DCA structure on the kinetics of polyol release. Here, we develop quantitative relationships between DCA structure and PUF acidolysis function for ∼10 different DCA reagents. PUF acidolysis kinetics were quantified with ∼1 s time resolution using the rate of carbon dioxide (CO2) gas generation, which is shown to occur concomitantly with polyol release. Pseudo-zeroth-order rate constants were measured as a function of DCA composition, reaction temperature, and DCA concentration, and apparent activation barriers were extracted. Our findings demonstrate that DCA carboxyl group proximity and phase of transport are descriptors of PUF acidolysis rates, rather than expected descriptors like pK a. DCAs with closer proximity acid groups exhibited faster PUF acidolysis rate constants. Furthermore, a shrinking core mechanism effectively describes the kinetic functional form of the kinetics of PUF acidolysis by DCAs. Measurements of acidolysis kinetics for model PUF (M-PUF) and end-of-life PUF (EOL PUF) confirm the applicability of our analysis to postconsumer materials. This work provides insights into the physical and chemical mechanisms controlling acidolysis, which can facilitate the development of efficient closed-loop PUF chemical recycling schemes.

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