TY - JOUR
T1 - New Green Bio-Based Binder to Reduce the Poisonous and Harmful Gases Generated from the Combustion of Pyrotechnics
AU - Yu, Yue
AU - Han, Zhiyue
AU - Deng, Li
AU - Wang, Fang
AU - Wang, Runguo
AU - Liu, Huan
AU - Yang, Xing
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/4/4
Y1 - 2022/4/4
N2 - The combustion of pyrotechnics is typically fast and incomplete, resulting in air pollutants such as particulate matters (PM) and poisonous, harmful gases. Demands for environment-friendly pyrotechnics that can be applied at a low temperature with a controllable combustion rate are ever-growing. The study used bio-based dibutyl itaconate (DBI) as the reactive monomer for self-polymerization to prepare poly-dibutyl itaconate (PDIB) with a molecular weight of 5307 g/mol. The molecular structure and thermal stability of PDIB were measured and analyzed. Serving as binders, PDIB and phenolic resin (PF) were, respectively, mixed with CH3N5(5-AT) and KNO3to prepare a pyrotechnic formulation. The final products were tested and compared in terms of their safety, mechanical, combustion, and environment-friendly performances. The results showed that the PDIB binder pyrotechnics is featured with a slower complete combustion, a large amount of gases produced, a small amount of combustion residues, a low PM2.5 concentration, and environmentally friendly flue gases. These prove that PDIB can be used as a new environmentally friendly binder for pyrotechnics. In addition, this study discovered the "string bag" theory of the pyrotechnic binder, which implies that the monomer structure of the binder and the ignition point of the polymer are the key to determine the combustion rate of pyrotechnics.
AB - The combustion of pyrotechnics is typically fast and incomplete, resulting in air pollutants such as particulate matters (PM) and poisonous, harmful gases. Demands for environment-friendly pyrotechnics that can be applied at a low temperature with a controllable combustion rate are ever-growing. The study used bio-based dibutyl itaconate (DBI) as the reactive monomer for self-polymerization to prepare poly-dibutyl itaconate (PDIB) with a molecular weight of 5307 g/mol. The molecular structure and thermal stability of PDIB were measured and analyzed. Serving as binders, PDIB and phenolic resin (PF) were, respectively, mixed with CH3N5(5-AT) and KNO3to prepare a pyrotechnic formulation. The final products were tested and compared in terms of their safety, mechanical, combustion, and environment-friendly performances. The results showed that the PDIB binder pyrotechnics is featured with a slower complete combustion, a large amount of gases produced, a small amount of combustion residues, a low PM2.5 concentration, and environmentally friendly flue gases. These prove that PDIB can be used as a new environmentally friendly binder for pyrotechnics. In addition, this study discovered the "string bag" theory of the pyrotechnic binder, which implies that the monomer structure of the binder and the ignition point of the polymer are the key to determine the combustion rate of pyrotechnics.
KW - bio-based polyester
KW - combustion
KW - green binder
KW - pyrotechnics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85127885779&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.2c00601
DO - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.2c00601
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127885779
SN - 2168-0485
VL - 10
SP - 4289
EP - 4299
JO - ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
JF - ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
IS - 13
ER -