Open Access Article
Tong Liuab,
Xiangui Yang
*a,
Shuqing Zhanga,
Qingyin Wanga,
Ning Jiangc and
Gongying Wanga
aChengdu Institute of Organic Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610041, Sichuan, China. E-mail: yangxg@cioc.ac.cn
bNational Engineering Laboratory for VOCs Pollution Control Material & Technology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
cSchool of Chemical Engineering, Sichuan University of Science & Engineering, Zigong, 643000, Sichuan, China
First published on 21st October 2022
Thermoplastic polycarbonate polyurethane elastomers (TPCUEs) are synthesized through a solvent-free non-isocyanate melt polycondensation route. The route starts with the synthesis of 1,6-bis(hydroxyethyloxycarbonylamino)hexane (BHCH) from ethylene carbonate and 1,6-hexanediamine, and then the TPCUEs are prepared by the melt polycondensation of BHCH and polycarbonate diols (PCDLs). The TPCUEs are characterized by GPC, FT-IR, 1H NMR, XRD, AFM, DSC, TGA and tensile testing. The TPCUEs prepared have linear structures and high molecular weights, with Mn over 3.0 × 104 g mol−1. And these TPCUEs exhibit excellent thermal and mechanical properties, with Tg ranging from −18 to −1 °C, Tm ranging from 93 to 122 °C, Td,5% over 240 °C, tensile strength between 28.1–47.3 Mpa, elongation at break above 1000%, Young's modulus between 13.8–32.7 Mpa and resilience at 200% fixed-length between 70–90%, which makes them a promising alternative to products synthesized through the isocyanate route. In addition, the effects of the hard segment contents and the molecular weights of soft segment on the properties of TPCUEs are researched.
The main problems associated with the synthesis of TPUEs by conventional methods are the toxicity of diisocyanates and their sensitivity to moisture. Isocyanates are highly toxic chemicals that can cause irreversible damage to the eyes and respiratory system.7,8 Moreover, isocyanates are usually obtained industrially through the more toxic phosgene. In addition, during the synthesis process, isocyanates readily react with water of raw materials or in the air to generate carbon dioxide gas, which causes bubbles to form in the materials, and while it is needed in foam synthesis, it is undesirable in the synthesis of TPUEs.9 Therefore, non-isocyanate routes that do not use isocyanates have attracted great interest from researchers in recent years.10–12
The non-isocyanate routes allow the synthesis of TPUEs by stepwise polymerization or condensation polymerization.12,13 Stepwise polymerization of diamines and dicyclic carbonates has been extensively studied, and TPUEs prepared in this way are called polyhydroxycarbamates due to the hydroxyl groups on their repeating units.1,10,14–16 The presence of hydroxyl groups in the side chains leads to the formation of inter and intra molecular hydrogen bonds with the carbamate carbonyl groups, and as a result, some properties of polyhydroxycarbamates like resistance to permeation and adhesion perform better than typical PUs.17 However, this route requires solvents and relatively long reaction time, and the preparation of the required dicyclic carbonates is complicated, especially for large molecules with complex structures.
TPUEs synthesized by condensation polymerization have similar structures and properties as classical PUs, and the reactions are mostly solvent-free and environmentally friendly. Bisalkyl carbamates and bishydroxyalkyl carbamates are commonly used as raw materials for the synthesis of TPUEs by condensation polymerization. Bisalkyl carbamates can be synthesized from dimethyl carbonate (DMC) with diamines, several reports have investigated this method in recent years.18–23 Shen et al. found experimentally that methyl bisalkyl carbamates were self-crosslinked at high temperature due to the reactions of terminal methoxycarbonyl groups with secondary amide groups. In order to solve this problem, a new “hard segment-first” route was developed to prepare linear PUs, and the obtained PUs exhibited quite good mechanical properties but poor flexibility.21 In 2002, Rokicki and Piotrowska reported a new method for the synthesis of aliphatic PUs using ethylene carbonate, diamines and diols catalyzed by a tin coordination catalyst. The authors used 1,4-butanediamine and 1,6-hexanediamine to open the ring of ethylene carbonate to obtain bis(hydroxyalkyl)carbamate, which was then condensed with diols to obtain PUs while removing small molecule ethylene glycol.24
The non-isocyanate routes are significant for the greening of the PUs industry, but the reported non-isocyanate routes of PUs synthesis still face some problems and challenges, such as difficulty in synthesizing PUs of high molecular weights, insufficient mechanical properties, long reaction time and by-product generation.12,25–29 In the PUs industry, polyester polyurethanes and polyether polyurethanes have their own advantages and disadvantages. Polyester polyurethanes have poor hydrolysis resistance, while polyether polyurethanes have poor mechanical and heat resistance properties. Polycarbonate polyurethanes overcome the disadvantages of both and have good weather resistance, bacteria resistance, hydrolysis resistance and excellent mechanical properties, and its good biocompatibility can also be used for biological materials.30–32
In this work, we obtained high molecular weight and high performance TPCUEs using a non-isocyanate route of melt polycondensation and overcame some problems of non-isocyanate routes, making the approach very competitive in replacing isocyanate routes.
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1, and the reactions were maintained under nitrogen atmosphere and refluxed at 100 °C for 5 h. The products were recrystallized with distilled water and the yields were about 89%. The 1H NMR spectra of BHCH is shown in ESI (Fig. S1†). Fig. 1 shows the synthesis route of BHCH.
1H NMR data (600 MHz, CDCl3): δ (ppm) = 4.98 (NH); 4.25 (CH2O); 3.89 (CH2OH); 3.27 (CH2NH); 2.75 (OH); 1.57 (CH2CH2NH); 1.39 (CH2CH2CH2NH).
1H NMR data (600 MHz, CDCl3): δ (ppm) = 4.17 (CH2O); 3.68 (OH); 1.74 (CH2CH2O, CH2CH2OH); 1.63 (CH2OH); 1.48 (CH2CH2CH2O, CH2CH2CH2OH).
The FT-IR spectra was measured by the Thermo Fisher Nicolet 670 within the wavelength range of 4000 to 500 cm−1 and the resolution was 4 cm−1. The 1H NMR spectra was measured by Bruker Avance NEO 600MHz spectrometer at 25 °C and the CDCl3 was used as solvent.
The surface morphology of TPCUEs was observed by atomic force microscope (AFM, Bruker Dimension Icon) at room temperature, and the tapping mode was selected.
The X-ray diffraction (XRD) of TPCUEs were analyzed by a Rigaku Smart Lab diffractometer with a range of 5–90°.
The melting and crystallization behaviors of TPCUEs were measured on the TA DSC2500 analyzer under N2 atmosphere, the samples were warmed up to 180 °C from 30 °C, then cooled down to −60 °C, and then warmed up to 180 °C for the second time with a temperature rise and fall rate of 10 °C min.
The thermal stabilities of TPCUEs were performed by the TGA5500 thermogravimetric analyzer, the samples were heated under N2 atmosphere with a temperature rise rate of 10 °C min−1 and a temperature range of 30–600 °C.
The tensile testing was measured by a universal tensile tester (NKK 3010D), and the samples were made into standard dumbbell-type specimens based on the standard of ISO 527-2: 1993. The tensile testing was tested at 25 °C and the stretching rate is 20 mm min−1. When the samples were stretched to an elongation of 200%, the external force was removed, then the samples were left for 3 min and the effective length was measured. The Resilience (Re) was calculated by the following equation:
![]() | (1) |
| TPCUEs a | SSb | HS%c | Mn (g mol−1) | Mw (g mol−1) | PDI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Reaction conditions: 0.2 wt% DBTO; 120 °C, 3 kPa, 1 h; then 180 °C, 300 Pa, 1 h.b SS: types of soft segments.c HS%: mass percentage of the hard segments, , where m1 and M1 are the mass and molecular weight of BHCH, respectively; and Me is the molecular weight of ethylene glycol, m2 is the mass of PCDL. |
|||||
| TPCUE1000/40 | PCDL1000 | 40 | 30460 | 41160 | 1.35 |
| TPCUE1000/50 | PCDL1000 | 50 | 42590 | 66320 | 1.56 |
| TPCUE1000/60 | PCDL1000 | 60 | 39270 | 48430 | 1.23 |
| TPCUE2000/40 | PCDL2000 | 40 | 44000 | 67710 | 1.54 |
| TPCUE2000/50 | PCDL2000 | 50 | 50330 | 69520 | 1.38 |
| TPCUE2000/60 | PCDL2000 | 60 | 62040 | 147100 | 2.37 |
| TPCUE3000/40 | PCDL3000 | 40 | 48520 | 63160 | 1.28 |
| TPCUE3000/50 | PCDL3000 | 50 | 76740 | 193100 | 2.52 |
O absorption peak and hydrogenated C
O absorption peak in the carbamate bond at 1736 cm−1 and 1685 cm−1. 1530 cm−1 and 1245 cm−1 peaks were the C–N stretching vibration peak and C–O stretching vibration peak in the carbamate bond, respectively. 979 cm−1 peak was C–O–C vibration peak in the carbonate group. The result of FT-IR spectra was in accordance with the structural features of TPCUE2000/50.
To further confirm the chemical structures of the TPCUE2000/50, the sample was analyzed by 1H NMR (Fig. 5). In the 1H NMR spectra of the sample, d (δ = 4.0 ppm), e (δ = 3.2 ppm), f (δ = 1.7 ppm) and i (δ = 1.3 ppm) were the proton characteristic peaks of the methylene on the hexamethylene chain segments, a (δ = 4.8 ppm) was the proton characteristic peak of the carbamate bond, c (δ = 4.1 ppm), g (δ = 1.5 ppm) and h (δ = 1.4 ppm) were the proton characteristic peaks of the methylene groups on the PCDLs chain segments, and b (δ = 4.2 ppm) was the terminal hydroxyl peak of the PCDLs chain segments. The 1H NMR spectra was consistent with the structural features of TPCUE2000/50, which further confirmed the chemical structures of the TPCUE2000/50.
| TPCUEs | Tg (°C) | Tm (°C) | Td,5% (°C) | Xc (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TPCUE1000/40 | −15.5 | 93 | 251 | 36 |
| TPCUE1000/50 | −7.9 | 112 | 246 | 19 |
| TPCUE1000/60 | −1.1 | 119 | 243 | 5 |
| TPCUE2000/40 | −17.2 | 103 | 265 | 39 |
| TPCUE2000/50 | −9.4 | 117 | 259 | 27 |
| TPCUE2000/60 | −1.5 | 122 | 245 | 9 |
| TPCUE3000/40 | −18.3 | 110 | 282 | 43 |
| TPCUE3000/50 | −10.7 | 117 | 262 | 33 |
As shown in Fig. 8, some samples showed exothermic peaks during the secondary heating process, which crystallized during heating, while others completed crystallization during cooling. The Tg of obtained TPCUEs ranged from −18 to −1 °C, and the Tg moved toward higher temperature as the hard segment contents increased; the Tm ranged from 93 to 122 °C, and the Tm increased with the increase of the hard segment contents. The increase in Tg with the increase in hard segment contents was due to the increase in the mixing of hard segments and soft segments, resulting in a decrease in the degree of microphase separation. The increase in Tm with the increase hard segment contents was due to the increase in the number of hydrogen bonds with the increase in the proportion of hard segments, and the increase in the degree of physical cross-linking of the TPCUEs. At the same hard segment contents, the Tg of the TPCUEs declined as the molecular weights of the PCDLs increased, which correlated with the increase in degree of microphase separation of TPCUEs. And the Tm increased because of the increase of crystallinity.
As shown in Fig. 9, the thermal decomposition occurred on different temperature ranges and was divided into two stages. The two stages were attributed to the decomposition of different components. The first decomposition stage was the decomposition of the hard segments and partly soft segments, and the second stage was the decomposition of the soft segments only. Because the bond energy of the carbonate bond was higher than that of the carbamate bond, the hard segments were more easily decomposed than the soft segments. The thermal stability of the TPCUEs was good, and the Td,5% were above 240 °C. The Td,5% of TPCUEs decreased as the contents of hard segment increased, because the heat resistance of hard segments was weaker than that of soft segments, and the decomposition of carbamate bonds became more obvious when the number of hard segments increased.34 Moreover, the thermal stability of TPCUEs increased with the molecular weights of the PCDLs increased. As the molecular weights of PCDLs increased, the degree of microphase separation increased, resulting in a higher degree of physical cross-linking of the hard segment domains, thus increasing the initial degradation temperature.
| TPCUEs | Tensile strength (MPa) | Young's modulus (MPa) | Strain at break (%) | Resilience at 200% fixed-length (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TPCUE1000/40 | 28.1 | 13.8 | 1254 | 84 |
| TPCUE1000/50 | 35.7 | 20.7 | 1106 | 78 |
| TPCUE1000/60 | 37.6 | 31.0 | 1033 | 75 |
| TPCUE2000/40 | 34.9 | 18.7 | 1305 | 85 |
| TPCUE2000/50 | 46.3 | 22.2 | 1200 | 82 |
| TPCUE2000/60 | 47.3 | 32.7 | 1085 | 80 |
| TPCUE3000/40 | 44.1 | 22.4 | 1387 | 87 |
| TPCUE3000/50 | 47.0 | 24.1 | 1233 | 82 |
This work does not use isocyanates, no solvent is needed, the reaction time is short and the by-product ethylene glycol generated can be recycled for the synthesis of ethylene carbonate, which is green and environmentally friendly. The TPCUEs prepared have no phenyl groups in its structures, so it does not yellow during use. In addition, the TPCUEs are soluble in organic solvents such as DMF, and have excellent strength and toughness, offering great prospects for industrialization.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ra05613e |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |