Application of Different Vegetable Oils as Processing Aids
(1) The use of processing oils or plasticizers is by far the most effective way to enhance the interaction between the rubber and filler by increasing the compatibility. (2) Petroleum oils with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are generated via the petroleum refining process.
Methyl Acetyl Ricinoleate as Polyvinyl Chloride Plasticizer
In this study, an additive derived from castor oil (methyl acetyl ricinoleate—MAR) was tested as a plasticizer for PVC. MAR was added to PVC in a range of 50–90 PHR and the increase of the plasticizer content had a great effect on maximum tension and tension at 100% of PVC samples.
Green plasticizers derived from soybean oil for poly(vinyl
Vegetable oil based plasticizers have potential use as nontoxic and sustainable plasticizer and as replacements for commonly used phthalate plasticizers.
A targeted review of bio-derived plasticizers with flame
A goal has been the design of efficient bio-derived plasticizers to replace petroleum derived plasticizers (DOP, DEHP, DIBP, DINP etc.) in PVC. Bio-derived means that the molecular building block for a plasticizer comes from biomass material and not from crude oil. A bio-derived plasticizer may be compostable or non-compostable.
New developments in vegetable oil materials science - AOCS
Vegetable oils are a mixture of unsaturated fatty acids with double bonds that act as reactive sites where the molecules can be chemically modified. Oleic acid, linoleic acid, and linolenic acid contain one, two, and three double bonds, respectively.
- Which vegetable oils can be used to make bio-based plasticizers?
- In addition to the above-mentioned biomass raw materials, there are other vegetable oils used by researchers to prepare novel bio-based plasticizers, such as sunflower oil [19, 56], jatropha oil , cottonseed oil , rubber seed oil and palm oil , which also has broad prospects.
- Can vegetable oil replace petroleum based oils in rubber composites?
- Until now, vegetable oils, such as palm oil, soybean oil, and linseed oil, have been successfully used as processing oils to replace petroleum-based oils in engineered rubber composites. So far, the concept of a vegetable-oil-based plasticizer has been applied to rubber composites containing di erent industrially important llers, like
- Are bio-based plasticizers based on soybean oil?
- Jia et al. [50, 51, 52] prepared a variety of novel bio-based plasticizers using soybean oil as raw materials, such as introducing P-containing groups (diethyl phosphate and phosphaphenanthrene group) into soybean oil to prepare plasticizers with flame-retardant properties.
- Are vegetable oils a green extender or plasticizer?
- The increasing environmental consciousness has forced rubber researchers to search for more environmentally friendly additives for the preparation of rubber products. For this purpose, the rising trend of utilizing vegetable oils as a green extender or plasticizer has become the most interesting approach in the rubber industry.
- Can polymerized soybean oil replace petroleum based naphthenic oil?
- Also, fi polymerized soybean oil can successfully replace petroleum-based naphthenic oil in carbon-black- lled NR/SBR com-fi pound. EPDM is generally used in di erent nontire ff applications. Green palm oil can be chosen as a plasticizer in CB- lled EPDM compounds.
- Can soybean oil be used as a plasticizer?
- For soybean oil molecules have ester groups and unsaturated double bonds that can be epoxidized, it is an ideal raw material for preparing plasticizers . According to the researcher’s report, the polar groups in the plasticizer are conducive to plasticization. In this case, ESO has been employed as PVC plasticizer for decades [46, 47].