ABSTRACT High sulfur‐content materials (HSMs) prepared via inverse vulcanization are attractive for a range of sustainable material applications, particularly when synthesized from waste‐derived feedstocks such as brown grease (BG). Two BG‐based composites,SunBG90andaBG90, were prepared using elemental sulfur and either native or allylated brown grease, respectively. This study explores the effect of reinforcing these sulfur‐rich networks with low loadings (0.5–2 wt. %) of highcis‐1,4‐content liquid polybutadiene (PBD). Incorporation of PBD resulted in significant increases in storage modulus, with a near‐linear relationship between PBD content and stiffness enhancement for both material types. At −60°C, storage modulus increased more than fivefold foraBG90and more than tripled forSunBG90. In contrast, flexural strength and flexural modulus exhibited non‐linear responses, with diminishing or reversed gains at higher PBD loadings, suggesting limits to rubber domain compatibility and dispersion. Thermal analysis confirmed high decomposition temperatures (212°C–226°C) and stable glass transitions, indicating thermal robustness of the reinforced networks. Compared with previous studies requiring higher PBD loadings, these results demonstrate that BG‐based HSMs can be effectively reinforced at low additive levels, offering mechanically robust, low‐cost, and renewable alternatives for structural applications.
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Brown Grease as a Precursor to Polyol Monomer for Polyurethane Synthesis
Abstract The valorization of waste‐derived feedstocks for polymer synthesis represents a sustainable alternative to petroleum‐based materials. In this study, brown grease, a low‐value waste lipid source, is utilized as a precursor for polyol monomer synthesis via a two‐step functionalization process. Transesterification of brown grease with allyl alcohol generates allyl esters, which are subsequently modified via thiol‐ene click chemistry with 2‐mercaptoethanol to yield hydroxyl‐functionalized polyols (BG‐diol). The thiol‐ene reaction proceeds under mild UV‐initiated conditions, achieving high conversion efficiency (>90%) while preserving the structural integrity of the derived polyol.BG‐diolis further polymerized with 4,4′‐methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) through step‐growth polymerization to form brown grease‐derived polyurethane (BG‐PU). Comparative analysis ofBG‐PUwith polyurethane (PU) synthesized from purified oleic acid (OLA‐PU) demonstrates comparable molecular weight distributions (Mn = 14.4 kDa,Mw = 20.4 kDa forBG‐PU) and thermal properties (Tg = 24 °C,Td,5%= 270 °C forBG‐PU). These results underscore the feasibility of brown grease as a cost‐effective and renewable alternative to plant oil‐based polyols, offering a pathway toward sustainable PU production while mitigating food security concerns. This approach exemplifies the potential of waste lipids in circular economy strategies for high‐performance polymer synthesis.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2203669
- PAR ID:
- 10644359
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- ChemistrySelect
- Volume:
- 10
- Issue:
- 33
- ISSN:
- 2365-6549
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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