A biobased reactive accelerant and diluent for drying oils

A recent study focuses on a biobased alternative to solvent thinners and metal catalyst accelerators in drying oils.

Stylised oil as a symbolic image.
The two most used drying oils are linseed oil and tung oil due to the fast-drying properties when they contact oxygen from the atmosphere.  Image source: AnthonyArnaud - Pixabay (symbol image).

Drying oils are unsaturated plant oils, widely used in paints and varnishes. The inclusion of solvent thinners and metal catalyst accelerators in drying oil formulations may be problematic from an environmental perspective. Researchers now report on the development of a biobased alternative that can act as both a reactive accelerant and a viscosity modifier for solvent-free drying oil systems.

The ozonolysis of canola oil and linseed fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) produced compounds that were shown to be effective in directly adding to conjugated carbon-carbon double bonds (-CH=CH-) resulting in faster polymerisation. For tung oil, substitution with 25 wt.% of ozonised linseed FAME reduced the drying time by 70% and the viscosity by 60%, while the glass transition temperature approached that of a pure linseed oil film.

Dependent on the concentration of ozonised lipids

The drying time reduction effect was found to be strongly dependent on the concentration of ozonised lipids but not greatly influenced by the ozonolysis time. For tung oil, a conjugated drying oil, incorporation of up to 65 wt% ozonized lipids was possible, resulting in dried films within less than 1 h at 60 °C and a 90% viscosity reduction while maintaining up to 100% biorenewable content and air-induced polymerisation.

The study has been published in Progress in Organic Coatings, Volume 157, August 2021.

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