| Literature DB >> 35323742 |
Sara García-Viñuales1,2, César Rubio1,2, Lidia Martínez-Izquierdo1,2, Beatriz Zornoza1,2, Elena Piera3, Miguel Ángel Caballero3, Carlos Téllez1,2.
Abstract
n-Eicosane-melamine formaldehyde microcapsules of an average size of 1.1 μm and latent heat of fusion of 146.2 ± 5.3 J/g have been prepared. They have been characterized by scanning electron microscopy, FTIR spectroscopy, calorimetric techniques, and thermogravimetric analyses. Under processing conditions, the microcapsules apparently preserved their properties, also maintaining their n-eicosane loading and heat storage capacity under washing conditions (water with detergent at 60 °C). The microcapsules synthesis has been scaled up for the fabrication of functional films by extrusion. For that, polymer films containing 10 wt.% of microcapsules were prepared at a pilot plant level. In those films, even though a fraction of the n-eicosane loading was lost during the extrusion process, the microcapsules showed good compatibility within the polyamide. The percentage of PCM in the polyamide 6 films was estimated by TGA, verifying also the heat storage capacity predicted by DSC (2.6 ± 0.7 J/g).Entities:
Keywords: heat storage; n-Eicosane-melamine formaldehyde microcapsules; phase change material; polyamide 6 films
Year: 2022 PMID: 35323742 PMCID: PMC8950258 DOI: 10.3390/membranes12030266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Membranes (Basel) ISSN: 2077-0375
Figure 1(a) Experimental set-up for the preparation of microcapsules; (b) extrusion process of a LDPE film with MF/n-eicosane microcapsules.
Amounts of reagents used in the scaling process.
| Name | Melamine | 37% Formaldehyde | SDBS | n-Eicosane |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MC1 | 0.6 | 1.2 | 1.0 | 7.5 |
| MC4 | 2.4 | 4.8 | 4.0 | 30.0 |
| MC8 | 4.8 | 9.6 | 8.0 | 60.0 |
| MC12 | 7.2 | 14.4 | 12.0 | 90.0 |
Figure 2SEM images of MF/n-eicosane microcapsules (a) (MC1); (b,c) individual MF/n-eicosane MC with different wall thicknesses (d) MC4; (e) MC8; (f) MC12.
Properties of melamine-formaldehyde microcapsules with PCM.
| PCM | Particle Size (µm) | Latent Heat of Melting (J/g) | PCM Load (wt%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n-octadecane | 0.9–9.2 | 170 | 70 | [ |
| n-octadecane | 2.2 | 144 | 59 | [ |
| n-eicosane | 0.5–2.7 | 162 | 75 | [ |
| n-eicosane | 0.1–10 | 134 | 53 | [ |
| paraffin wax | 0.26–0.45 | 107–135 | 60–74 | [ |
| 1-dodecanol | 0.49 | 79 | 41 | [ |
| n-eicosane | 1.1 ± 0.4 | 146.2 | 62.2 | This study |
Figure 3Analysis of the MF/n-eicosane microcapsules (MC1): (a) TGA and its 1st derivative; (b) DSC.
Figure 4FTIR spectra of n-eicosane, MF polymer, SDBS surfactant and MF/n-eicosane microcapsules MC1.
Figure 5Influence of scaling: (a) size distribution of MCs in number; (b) distribution of the sphericity factor of the microcapsules in number.
Figure 6SEM images of MF/n-eicosane microcapsules MC4: (a) after half an hour at 260 °C; (b) after half an hour at 300 °C; (c) after washing with soap and water for 2 h at 60 °C; (d) after washing with soap and water for 72 h at 60 °C.
Figure 7Heating–cooling cycles of the MF/n-eicosane MCs.
Figure 8Cross section view of PA6 film made at 256 °C and 50 bar: (a) without MCs; (b–d) with 10 wt.% MF/n-eicosane MCs.
Figure 9TGA of PA6 film made at 256 °C and 50 bar without MCs and four samples with 10 wt.% MF/n-eicosane MCs. Four different areas of the membrane were considered (MC 1 to MC 4).