This invention relates to a process for the production of a polyhydroxycarboxylic acid that is loaded with plant meals.
The invention also covers the product that is obtained and its use as a biodegradable material in a natural environment.
It is known that controlled-biodegradability materials are increasingly sought after, in particular the materials that can break down in a natural environment without requiring that microorganisms be specifically supplied.
Currently, the biodegradable materials in a natural environment are generally obtained from non-renewable raw materials of petrochemical origin. They are not ecological and are rarely entirely degraded.
Also, there is therefore a need for materials based on renewable material, entirely degradable of course, i.e., by invoking essentially chemical and photochemical mechanisms.
This is the purpose of this invention in proposing a process for obtaining a polyhydroxycarboxylic acid that is loaded with plant meals.
The production process according to the invention comprises the implementation of the following stages:
The polyhydroxycarboxylic acid that is obtained by the implementation of the process according to the invention can be used as a biodegradable material.
This polyhydroxycarboxylic acid is entirely degradable in a natural environment.
Advantageously, this acid, based on renewable carbon, is not harmful to the environment.
Other characteristics and advantages will emerge from the description in detail of the following production process according to the invention, according to a nonlimiting embodiment that is illustrated by two particular examples.
I. 1. Stage 1: Polycondensation of a Hydroxycarboxylic Acid
The first stage of the process consists in polycondensing a hydroxycarboxylic acid by direct dehydration in the presence of a diol or diacid compound for forming a functionalized prepolymer.
The reaction that occurs is as follows:
Preferably, lactic acid or glycolic acid is used as a hydroxycarboxylic acid.
The polycondensation is carried out under vacuum at high temperature:
Preferably, the polycondensation is carried out in the presence of catalysts, which make it possible to increase the speed of the reaction.
Among the catalysts that are able to be used for this invention, it is possible to cite the metals of groups I, II, III and IV of the periodic table, or salts based on these metals. In particular, it is possible to cite tin octoate, sulfuric acid, titanium butoxide, titanium isopropoxide, tin oxide, antimony oxide, dibutyltin dilaurate and zirconium acetylacetonate.
Preferably, succinic acid or adipic acid, such as diacid or 1,4-butanediol, is used as diol.
This first stage makes it possible to obtain an acid or hydroxyl functionalized prepolymer with a low molar mass on the order of 1,000 to 5,000 g/mol.
The second stage of the process consists in reacting the functionalized prepolymer with an extension agent in the presence of plant meals for forming a polyhydroxycarboxylic acid of highly loaded mass.
The extension agent reacts on the acid or hydroxyl functions of the prepolymer.
The reaction that occurs is as follows:
Preferably, a compound that is selected from among:
Among the extension agents that are able to be used for this invention, it is possible to cite, for example, 2,2′-bis(2-oxazoline), 1,3-phenylene-bis(2-oxazoline), carbonylbiscaprolactam or 1,4-butanediisocyanate.
The plant meals can be selected from among:
The polyhydroxycarboxylic acids that are obtained according to this invention have the following characteristics:
These polyhydroxycarboxylic acids that are obtained according to this invention are totally amorphous polymers with glass transition temperatures of between 35 and 50° C.
They are loaded with plant meals at a height of 1 to 50% of the total mass.
These acids can be used as material that is entirely biodegradable in a natural environment.
For the following two examples:
A flask that contains a mixture of L-lactic acid, succinic acid (between 1 and 5 mol % with regard to the lactic acid) and tin octoate (between 0.1 and 2% by mass of the total mass) is heated between 160 and 190° C., and it is connected to a rotary evaporator.
The assembly is placed under reduced pressure so as to eliminate the water that is produced by the condensation reactions.
At t=0, the mixture is placed at 800 mbar, then the pressure is reduced over time up to about 20 mbar, along a suitable pressure profile as a function of time.
The reaction is stopped after 24 hours, and:
The prepolymer that is obtained has the following characteristics:
It has an acid index of 38 mgKOH/g.
The prepolymer that is obtained in stage 1 is introduced in a glass pin that is brought to a temperature of between 150 and 190° C. by means of an oil bath.
After one minute, the prepolymer is melted, and an extension agent, 1,3-phenylene-bis-(2-oxazoline), is added. The mixture is homogenized by mechanical stirring.
The polylactic acid that is obtained is recovered between 3 and 7 minutes after total melting of the extension agent.
The polylactic acid that is obtained has an acid index of 3.5 mgKOH/g.
A flask that contains a mixture of L-lactic acid, succinic acid (between 1 and 5 mol % with regard to the lactic acid) and tin octoate (between 0.1 and 2% by mass of the total mass) is heated between 160 and 190° C., and it is connected to a rotary evaporator.
The assembly is placed under reduced pressure so as to eliminate the water that is produced by the condensation reactions.
At t=0, the mixture is brought to 800 mbar.
At t=1 hour, the vacuum dropped to 60 mbar.
At t=8 hours, the temperature is raised to 200° C. for about 90 minutes.
The reaction is stopped after 9 hours and 30 minutes of reaction, and:
The prepolymer that is obtained has the following characteristics:
The extension reactions are carried out in an extruder between 160 and 180° C., at a flow rate of between 1.55 and 1.7 kg/h and a torque speed of between 50 and 55 rpm.
The following are mixed in the extruder:
The polylactic acid that is obtained is recovered between 2 and 5 minutes after the introduction of the different elements in the extruder.
The polylactic acid that is obtained has an acid index of 3.1 mgKOH/g. It has two populations of chains:
If this polylactic acid is left in the water in a specimen, after 53 days the content of the specimen loses 64.1% of its mass, which shows the biodegradable nature of the loaded polylactic acid that is obtained according to the invention.