Abstract

The mechanical properties and water resistance of castor oil-based waterborne polyurethane are mutually limited due to the presence of a hydrophilic chain extender. Herein, Arbutin (AT) was used as a crosslinking agent, and benzimidazole (CR-455) was utilized as an ultraviolet absorber, sustainable long fatty hydrophobic chain extenders, sorbitan monooleate (SP), glycerol laurate (GML), glycerin monostearate (GMS), and trimethylolpropane monooleate (TPM), were introduced into castor oil-based waterborne polyurethane (CWPU) backbones through molecular structure design respectively. Subsequently, the amount of SP was changed to prepare a series of waterborne polyurethane dispersions, and their emulsion and film properties were thoroughly investigated. The finding showed that the incorporation of long fatty hydrophobic chain extenders led to an increase in crosslinking density, thereby endowing CWPU films with good mechanical properties, water resistance, and anti-corrosion efficacy. Moreover, the bio-based content in the CWPU film had reached an impressive 90.9 %. The addition of SP content resulted in a gradual improvement in the mechanical properties, water resistance, and corrosion resistance of CWPU-SP films. When the SP content was 40 %, due to the high strength of hydrogen bonds and the density of crosslinking in systems, the tensile strength, toughness, water absorption rate, and corrosion protection efficiency of the CWPU-SP40 film reached 18.1 MPa, 20 MJ/m3,7.7 %, and 98.47 %, respectively. Particularly, the prepared transparent CWPU films exhibited complete UV shielding. This work would pave the way for the application of bio-based waterborne polyurethanes in high-performance coatings, such as anti-corrosion and sunscreen.

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