Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
Chemically obtained flexible polyurethane foams (thermosetting) are used in many industrial applications. The quality and functional properties of such foams are closely related to the manufacturing process. They are made from a mixture of liquids of a pseudo-plastic nature, within which a certain number of highly exothermic chemical reactions take place concomitantly. The aim of this article is to establish, from the engineer's point of view, a systematic identification protocol concerning the main thermo-mechanical parameters of honeycomb polyurethane. A 3D model that is capable of recognizing the evolution of the properties in polyurethane foam during the process phase and predicting the cellular microstructure of the foam.
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Jérôme BIKARD: Engineer from the École supérieure de mécanique de Marseille (ESM2) - Doctorate in Mechanics from the University of Aix-Marseille II. In charge of research at CEMEF (Centre de mise en forme des matériaux) MINES ParisTech – CNRS UMR 7635
INTRODUCTION
Polyurethanes, thermosetting polymers, occupy a privileged position in industry. They result from the chemical polymerization reaction of an isocyanate with mobile hydrogen-bearing groups (mainly hydroxyl groups), e.g. alcohol functions. To obtain cellular materials, this exothermic reaction must be coupled with a gaseous release (chemical or physical) which allows the creation of overpressurized gas cells within the polymer (thus its expansion) until the polyurethane is completely polymerized. The final properties of polyurethane foam depend on the chemical components (diphenylmethane diisocyanates DMI or toluylene diisocyanates TMI), the blowing agent, the process conditions (temperature, pressure, hygrometry) and the nature of the mold facings (strong skin effect). Thanks to the constant development of new formulations (new monomers, new catalysts and the addition of other substances), polyurethanes can now be manufactured in a wide variety of textures and hardnesses.
However, due to the complexity of the thermo-chemo-rheological couplings taking place during processing, and the sometimes complex geometry of the molds used, process control and optimization is proving difficult. The analytical models found in the literature are inadequate to account for the complexity of these phenomena. Due to the concomitance of mechanisms (chemical reactions, rapid and heterogeneous temperature evolution, strong rheological couplings, 3D flows), only a model including all these elements has a chance of describing this type of process. The aim of this dossier is therefore to set up, from an engineer's point of view, a systematic protocol for identifying the major thermomechanical parameters of cellular polyurethane, and their use in a 3D model, presented here, capable of accounting for the evolution of polyurethane foam properties during the process and predicting, at least on average, the foam's cellular microstructure.
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Polyurethane foam manufacturing
Bibliography
Software tools
Here is a non-exhaustive list of software for numerical simulation of foam injection into a mold:
VirtuFoam: 2D planar and axisymmetric finite element foam calculation modules using Matlab© software – coupling equation of motion, heat, conservation of chemical species, evolution of the material front in a mold.
...Events
Main conferences with papers on polyurethane foam processing and modelling:
ESAFORM Conference, Lyon, 23-25 April 2008.
4 th Annual European Rheology Conference, April 12-14, 2007, Napoli, Italy.
18th French Mechanical Congress, Grenoble, August 27-31, 2007.
9 th...
Directory
Suppliers – processors (non-exhaustive list)
PERSTORP
SAINT-GOBAIN
http://www.verneret.saint-gobain.com
3M
Statistical and economic data
ADEME internal report: Study of the polyurethane market and state of the art in recycling techniques,
http://www.synomia.fr/search/index.php?mid=6be7682b47cdedcecf17438ccec36c1f&1=fr
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