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Over the past 20 years, radiation curing has become a well established coating technology used in
many different applications. Today, an extraordinary variety of acrylic raw materials is at
the formulator’s disposal to be chosen for sophisticated and tailor-made formulations.
The majority of those raw materials is of petrochemical origin. However, there is an increasing
demand for coating systems that contain a high amount of renewable material. This demand is heard
primarily in the wood coating and printing ink industries. The UV curing oils are one example for a
coating system that has been developed in order to fulfill this demand.
The industrial oiling of wood is an important application for UV curing oils as they bring along
significant advantages over conventionally drying oils: By using UV oils systems it is possible to save
large amounts of organic solvents which is an important aspect with regard to environmental
concerns. Also, the drying process which is known to be very time-consuming when conventional
oxidatively drying oils are used. With UV-curing oils it can be done in not more than a fraction of a
second.
If requested by the customer, even the multiple layers in parquet coatings can be assembled using a
coating system with a high content of renewable material.
In this presentation the state of the art of renewable raw materials in UV-curing systems is described
and further possibilities for applications in the coatings industry are presented.
Radiation curing coating systems are in general formulated from a reactive resin and, optionally, a low
viscous reactive diluent. A photoinitiator is added to guarantee an immediate curing upon exposure to
UV light. The coating formulation is completed by the addition of additives, pigments and fillers.
Recently, epoxidized fatty oils and their derivatives showed a promising effect when used as reactive
[1]
resins. Those epoxidized oils are commercially manufactured from unsaturated fatty oils like
soybean and linseed oils which are catalytically oxidized by hydrogen peroxide.
In this reaction virtually all the unsaturated double bonds in the oil are transferred into epoxy rings.
Epoxidized soybean and linseed oils are commercially available because they have been used for
decades as plasticizers in special applications.
Due to the higher degree of unsaturation of natural linseed oil compared to soybean oil, the former
shows a higher degree of epoxidation as well as reactivity.
O O O
O C
O O
O C
O O O
O C
For UV curing applications the epoxidized oils can be used as such. When irradiated by UV light, a
photoinitiator that is able to initiate curing by a cationic mechanism will start the immediate film forming
process by a cross-linking ring opening reaction.
[2,3]
Formulations using aliphatic epoxides and polyols have also been decribed in the literature.
The epoxy ring can also be opened in a catalytic reaction with acrylic acid. The epoxy acrylates which
result from this reaction can be cured in a similar way as the epoxidized oils. The photoinitiator for this
curing process has to react according to a free radical mechanism.
Since the viscosity of epoxidized fatty oils increases significantly upon ring opening reaction with
acrylic acid it may be necessary to use reactive diluents in the formulation to re-adjust its viscosity.
Epoxidized and fully acrylated linseed oil contains 63 % of renewable raw material, epoxidized and
acrylated soybean oil even 71 %.
If only a part of the epoxy rings in an epoxidized fatty oil are reacted and opened with acrylic acid (as
shown in figure 2) a resin is obtained that can be cured by both mechanisms, radical and cationic. In
such a dual-cure-process the respective advantages of each mechanism combine synergetically.
O
C
O O O OH
O C
O O
O C
O HO OH
O C
O O
C C
O O
Also polyfunctional glycidyl ethers can be esterified with mixtures of acrylic and fatty acids.
One example for this reaction is the bisphenol A diglycidyl ether acrylate modified with a fatty acid.
O
OH
O O O O
OH
O
The fatty acid used in the manufacture of this product can be saturated as well as unsaturated. Also a
dimer fatty acid can be used.
Those fatty acid modified epoxy acrylates provide a harder film than the epoxidized oil acrylates when
cured in a radical mechanism.
If a polyunsaturated fatty acid is used it is possible to cure the unsaturated double bonds by an
oxidative mechanism in addition to the UV curing of the acrylic double bonds.
A typical fatty acid modified epoxy acrylate contains approximately 30 % of renewable raw material.
The most important resins within the UV curing technology are polyester acrylates.
Polyester acrylates are produced in a condensation reaction of a polyol with polycarboxylic acids and
acrylic acid. Due to the multitude of possible combinations of these compounds it is possible to
provide excellent raw materials for formulations that can be cured to form coatings with tailor-made
film properties.
With polyols and polycarboxylic acids that are made from renewable raw materials such a polyester
acrylate can contain up to 40 % of renewable material.
Glycerol (as long as it is produced in the fat splitting process), sorbitol and carbohydrate derivatives
are examples of those polyols.
Azelaic acid and sebacic acid are good examples for polycarboxylic acids that are made from
renewable material. Azelaic acid is commercially produced by ozonolysis of oleic acid and sebacic
acid can be obtained by thermolysis of castor oil.
Dimer fatty acid is made from soybean fatty acid in a dimerization step. Also this C36-fatty acid is used
for the manufacture of polyester acrylates.
O O HO OH
HO OH O O
Azelaic acid C9H16O4
O
OH
HO
O
The following polyesters in figures 5 and 6 are just two examples for polyester acrylates based on
renewable material.
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O
O O O O
O O O O
O O O O
O O O O
O O
O O
Again, because of the high viscosities of the hitherto described epoxy and polyester acrylates the
formulator often has to use reactive diluents in his formulations.
Propoxylated glycerol triacrylate (GPTA) is a well known reactive diluent that contains 21 % of
renewable material (as long as the glycerol is produced by splitting a natural fat.)
Its low viscosity, excellent cutting power and high reactivity compare to the well known hexanediol
diacrylate (HDDA).
With its 77 %, dimerdiol diacrylate contains the highest content of renewable material by far.
The dimerdiol which is used for its production is obtained by hydrogenation of dimer fatty esters.
Dimerdiol diacrylate shows not only a very low surface tension, it also supports the matting effect in
coating systems due to its partial incompatibility.
content double bond viscosity [mPas] (23 °C)
renewable density
material [mmol H2/g] 100 % 80 : 20 1) 60 : 40 2)
In reacting polyfunctional alcohols with a mixture of acrylic and fatty acids, low viscous UV resins can
be produced. These UV resins can be used along with polyester and epoxy acrylates to formulate
radiation curing coating systems.
O O
O O
Polyol
O O
O O
Both, saturated and unsaturated fatty acids are used in the production of these UV resins that can also
be formulated as dual cure systems.
The properties of some selected products are listed in the following table.
polyester acrylate containing: saturated unsaturated polyunsaturated
fatty acid fatty acid fatty acid
double bond
[mmol H2 / g] 3,6 3,1 3,1
density
pendulum
[s] 55 60 57
hardness
renewable
[%] 33 41 41
material
Literature
[1] Chhim, P. Inst. Rech. Appl. Polym., Le Mans, Fr., The synthesis of a photocurable oil from
a vegetable oil and examples of applications. Double Liaison - Chim. Peint. (1987), 34(383),
35-8, XVII-XIX.
[2] Crivello, J. V.; Narayan, R.; Sternstein, S. S., J. Appl. Polymer Science (1997), 64(11), 2073-
2087.
[3] Mahmood, Mohd. Hilmi et al., J. Sains Nukl. Malays. (1993), 11(1), 1-10.