Abstract

Before the Montreal Protocol of 1987 and the subsequent phasing-out of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in industrial applications, rigid polymer foams were made using these compounds as secondary blowing agents. The CFCs remain trapped in the gaseous part of the cellular foam structure, and once discarded these foams constitute a significant reservoir for the environmental release of ozone-depleting chemicals. Environmental degradation of the foam accelerates this process. Of particular interest in this work is the degradative effect of ultraviolet (UV) light on rigid polyurethane foams. Foams were subjected to accelerated weathering conditions and then viewed with a scanning electron microscope. The thin cell membranes near the foam surface degrade when exposed to UV light, leaving only a network of polymer struts that offers negligible resistance to the escape of CFCs or any other gases contained within. This effect has been reproduced qualitatively through simulated weathering of a computer-generated foam s...

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