Long-chain aliphatic polyesters from plant oils for injection molding, film extrusion and electrospinning

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Abstract

The polycondensation of long-chain α,ω-diesters with long-chain α,ω-diols, prepared by means of catalytic conversion of plant oils, affords linear aliphatic polyesters. They contain both long crystallizable polyethylene-like hydrocarbon segments and ester moieties in the backbone. In a convenient catalytic one-step process a high-purity polycondensation grade dimethyl-1,19-nonadecanedioate monomer is obtained directly from the technical grade methyl ester of high oleic sunflower oil. Likewise, dimethyl-1,23- tricosanedioate is derived from methyl erucate. The successful scale-up renders both intermediates available on a 100 g scale. Injection molded parts of polyester-19.19 and -23.23 with a number average molecular mass of Mn = 3 × 104 g mol-1 possess an elongation at break of >600% and a Young's modulus of 400 MPa. Electrospinning produces non-woven meshes. The polyesters prepared even enable film extrusion and represent new blend components for a variety of thermoplastics including polyethylene. © the Partner Organisations 2014.

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Stempfle, F., Ritter, B. S., Mülhaupt, R., & Mecking, S. (2014). Long-chain aliphatic polyesters from plant oils for injection molding, film extrusion and electrospinning. Green Chemistry, 16(4), 2008–2014. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4gc00114a

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