Polyurethane Foam from Industrial Waste of Plywood Production
4th Workshop "Green Chemistry and Nanotechnologies in Polymer Chemistry" 2013
Aigars Pāže, Jānis Zandersons, Uldis Stirna, Jānis Rižikovs, Ausma Tardenaka, Baiba Spince

This study shows the possibility of using birch bark, a by-product of plywood production, for preparing polyurethane foam. A birch bark lignocellulose component – inner bark – was liquefied to obtain a polyurethane raw material – polyol mixture. Outer bark, containing valuable biologically active pentacyclic triterpenes (betulin, lupeol, betulinic acid, etc.), after extracting those compounds, was subjected to hydrothermal treatment in alkaline medium, and the other main inner bark component – suberin – was depolymerised. The obtained suberinic acid triethanolamine ester, as a polyol component, was used for polyurethane foam synthesis. Both types of polyols gave polyurethane foams with good physical properties. Such a complex approach has shown that it is possible to prepare new products with a high added value from waste natural raw materials.


Keywords
Inner birch bark, liquefaction, suberinic acids, polyurethane foam

Pāže, A., Zandersons, J., Stirna, U., Rižikovs, J., Tardenaka, A., Spince, B. Polyurethane Foam from Industrial Waste of Plywood Production. In: 4th Workshop "Green Chemistry and Nanotechnologies in Polymer Chemistry", Italy, Pisa, 4-6 September, 2013. Pisa: University of Pisa, 2013, pp.108-109.

Publication language
English (en)
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