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Polymer Sciences | ISSN: 2471-9935
October 02-03, 2017 Chicago, USA
3
rd
International Conference on
Polymer Science and Engineering
Effects of rice straw-based polyol on the thermophysical properties of rigid polyurethane foam
Kriztine Magadan-Icalina, Rosal Jane M. Ruda,
and
Arnold A. Lubguban
Mindanao State University - Iligan Institute of Technology, Philippines
Statement of the Problem:
Vegetable oils and lignocellulosic biomass are two major types of bio-based resources gaining interest for
bio-based polyols for polyurethane (PU) production. However, the consumption of huge amounts of vegetable oils could result in a
shortage of vegetable oils and will cause the increase in food prices. Therefore, lignocellulosic biomass is seen as a better alternative
raw material for PU production. Various kinds of lignocellulosic biomass, have been used for the production of bio-based PU foams
but the use of lignocellulosic rice straw is not yet explored. Thus, the study aims to develop a PU rigid foam from rice straw-based
polyol and investigate the effect of isocyanate index on the thermophysical properties of the foam.
Methodology &Theoretical Orientation:
PU foams were prepared by reacting isocyanates in varying indices with polyols containing
15% of rice straw-based polyol and 85% petroleum-based polyol and their thermal conductivity, density and compressive strength
were determined.
Findings:
PU foams with no biopolyol replacement has superior thermal and mechanical properties over the PU foams with biopolyol
replacement. However, those with biopolyol replacement were significant less dense compared to the commercial formulation. This
could indicate possible application in industries where lightweight materials is important. Thermal characterization of the foam
samples at different isocyanate indices indicate that increasing the isocyanate content improves insulation property of the PU as
evident with the decreasing conductivity. This is also true with compressive strength. The index is directly proportional to the
compressive strength. Density, on the other hand, is directly proportional to the isocyanate content.
Conclusion & Significance:
Successful development of PU rigid foam products using biomass-based polyols obtained from a
renewable feed stock rice straw offers a practical and economic procedure for potential scale-up and commercialization.
kriztinemagadan@gmail.comPolym Sci, 3:3
DOI: 10.4172/2471-9935-C1-003




