Abstract
This study outlines a method for producing chemically recyclable crosslinked polyesters using renewable polyols-glycerol and sorbitol-combined with adipic acid (AA), which is transformed/activated into a polyanhydride mixture prior to use. A three-step procedure has been designed: 1) an acid-catalyzed reaction of AA with nontoxic isopropenyl acetate or acetic anhydride to form a crosslinking mixture (CLM) made of adipic-acetic mixed polyanhydrides; 2) a solvent- and additive-free process where glycerol or sorbitol, or a combination thereof, is reacted with the CLM to achieve a prepolymer, and 3) a casting/molding of the liquid viscous prepolymer to yield a thermoset as the end product. Different thermosets (eight examples) are prepared by changing the reagents ratio. These solids are thoroughly characterized by tensile tests, DMA, high-resolution magic angle spinning and solid-state NMR, thermal gravimetric analysis, DSC, and fourier transformed infra red (FT-IR) spectroscopy. The formation of cross-linked polyesters is confirmed in all cases, but mechanical properties varied significantly from one specimen to another. Interestingly, a tensile strength up to 18 MPa-approximately an order of magnitude higher than similar polymers-is achieved when sorbitol and the CLM are used in a 1:1 wt% ratio. The chemical recycle of the resulting polymers is achieved via methanolysis with quantitative recovery of the monomeric units.
| Original language | American English |
|---|---|
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | ChemSusChem |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2025 |
NLR Publication Number
- NREL/JA-2800-97045
Keywords
- bioplastics
- chemical recycling
- isopropenyl acetate
- solvent-free
- upcycling