TY - GEN
T1 - Morphology of fatty acid-based vinyl esters
AU - La Scala, John J.
AU - Jeyarajasingam, Amutha
AU - Sands, James M.
AU - Palmese, Giuseppe R.
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - One method of reducing styrene emissions from vinyl ester resins is to replace some or all of the styrene with fatty acid-based monomers. Methacrylated fatty acid (MFA) monomers are ideal candidates because they are inexpensive, have low volatilities, and promote global sustainability because they are derived from renewable resources. The morphology of fatty acid-based vinyl esters was very much dependent on whether methacrylated VE (VEM) monomers or acrylated VE (VEA) monomers were used. DMA traces showed that VEM resins had a much broader glass transition than VEA resins. Certain ternary blends of vinyl esters, MFA, and styrene showed the presence of two transitions, one at ∼ 70°C and another above 100°C for VEM resins. However, only one transition was observed for VEA-based ternary blends, intermediate of the two transitions for VEM resins. FTIR reactivity ratio measurements showed that VEA monomers would prefer to react with MFA monomers and MFA monomers would prefer to react with themselves, while the components of VEM resins react randomly. This indicates that microgel domains are more likely to occur in VEM polymers, explaining the presence of multiple phases in VEM polymers. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the AIChE Annual Meeting and Fall Showcase (Cincinnati, OH 10/30/2005-11/4/2005).
AB - One method of reducing styrene emissions from vinyl ester resins is to replace some or all of the styrene with fatty acid-based monomers. Methacrylated fatty acid (MFA) monomers are ideal candidates because they are inexpensive, have low volatilities, and promote global sustainability because they are derived from renewable resources. The morphology of fatty acid-based vinyl esters was very much dependent on whether methacrylated VE (VEM) monomers or acrylated VE (VEA) monomers were used. DMA traces showed that VEM resins had a much broader glass transition than VEA resins. Certain ternary blends of vinyl esters, MFA, and styrene showed the presence of two transitions, one at ∼ 70°C and another above 100°C for VEM resins. However, only one transition was observed for VEA-based ternary blends, intermediate of the two transitions for VEM resins. FTIR reactivity ratio measurements showed that VEA monomers would prefer to react with MFA monomers and MFA monomers would prefer to react with themselves, while the components of VEM resins react randomly. This indicates that microgel domains are more likely to occur in VEM polymers, explaining the presence of multiple phases in VEM polymers. This is an abstract of a paper presented at the AIChE Annual Meeting and Fall Showcase (Cincinnati, OH 10/30/2005-11/4/2005).
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M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:33646736607
SN - 0816909962
SN - 9780816909964
T3 - AIChE Annual Meeting Conference Proceedings
BT - 05AIChE
PB - American Institute of Chemical Engineers
T2 - 05AIChE: 2005 AIChE Annual Meeting and Fall Showcase
Y2 - 30 October 2005 through 4 November 2005
ER -