Utilization of biorenewable components in UV‐curable coating formulations is both economically and environmentally beneficial, particularly when compared to their petrochemical‐based counterparts. To produce UV‐curable coatings of high biorenewable content with enhanced performance, acrylated epoxidized soybean oil (ASBO) was combined with biorenewable reactive diluent tetrahydrofufuryl acrylate, adhesion promoters, photoinitiator and hyperbranched acrylates (HBAs) as synthetic tougheners. The HBAs were found to impart high functionality and low viscosity, thus increasing crosslinking in the coating network and improving mechanical and thermal properties such as film hardness, adhesion, solvent resistance, impact resistance, tensile modulus and toughness, glass transition temperature and thermal stability. Real‐time Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy showed decreased acrylate conversion when compared with a reference formulation without HBAs, which was attributed to earlier coating network vitrification during UV irradiation. ASBO‐based coatings were also thermally annealed to allow further reaction of unreacted components in the vitrified network. As a result, coating properties were further improved. Overall, the addition of HBAs as synthetic tougheners to UV‐curable ASBO‐based biorenewable coating systems was shown to greatly improve the corresponding coating properties. Copyright © 2010 Society of Chemical Industry
Three bio‐based thiols were synthesized via the thermal thiol‐ene reactions between sucrose soya ester (SSE) and multifunctional thiols; then, thiourethane coatings were produced from these thiols and their coating properties were studied. A series of high bio‐renewable content thiol oligomers were synthesized according to the previously reported thermal thiol‐ene reaction. Fourier transform infrared spectra (FTIR) confirmed the complete consumption of the double bonds in SSE, and gel permeation chromatography confirmed the formation of high‐molecular‐weight oligomers. The viscosity of these oligomers remained low due to their compact and branched structures. Thermoset thiourethane coatings were prepared from these thiol oligomers and polyisocyanate trimer resins with dibutyltin diacetate as the catalyst. FTIR spectra confirmed the formation of the thiourethane group. However, coatings based on isophorone diisocyanate (IPDI) polyisocyanate resin showed a lower degree of cure because of the decreased resin mobility due to the rigid cyclohexane ring. Generally, all the coatings showed good adhesion to aluminum panels, and had high gloss. However, they exhibited low tensile strength, modulus and chemical resistance due to the flexibility of the fatty acid chain. Coatings based on more rigid IPDI‐based polyisocyanate showed higher Tg, hardness and direct impact resistance compared with the hexamethylene‐diisocyanate (HDI) based polyisocyanate counterparts. Thermogravimetric analysis results showed that coatings based on mercaptanized soybean oil have better thermal stability than those from di‐pentene dimercaptan or glycol di‐3‐mercaptopropionate. Two Tg values were found by both differential scanning calorimetry and dynamic mechanical thermal analysis of thiourethanes from HDI‐based polyisocyanate and di‐pentene dimercaptan or glycol di‐3‐mercaptopropionate based oligomers due to phase separation resulting from the poor compatibility between HDI‐based polyisocyanate and the respective oligomers. Copyright © 2011 Society of Chemical Industry
Industrial grade soybean oil (SBO) and thiols were reacted to generate thiol-functionalized oligomers via a thermal, free radical initiated thiol-ene reaction between the SBO double bond moieties and the thiol functional groups. The effect of the reaction conditions, including thiol concentration, catalyst loading level, reaction time, and atmosphere, on the molecular weight and the conversion to the resultant soy-thiols were examined in a combinatorial high-throughput fashion using parallel synthesis, combinatorial FTIR, and rapid gel permeation chromatography (GPC). High thiol functionality and concentration, high thermal free radical catalyst concentration, long reaction time, and the use of a nitrogen reaction atmosphere were found to favor fast consumption of the SBO, and produced high molecular weight products. The thiol conversion during the reaction was inversely affected by a high thiol concentration, but was favored by a long reaction time and an air reaction atmosphere. These experimental observations were explained by the initial low affinity of the SBO and thiol, and the improved affinity between the generated soy-thiol oligomers and unreacted SBO during the reaction. The synthesized soy-thiol oligomers can be used for renewable thiol-ene UV curable materials and high molecular solids and thiourethane thermal cure materials.
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