Polymer Testing (May 2022)

Combining vegetable oils and bioactive compounds via inverse vulcanization for antioxidant and antimicrobial materials

  • Juan Cubero-Cardoso,
  • Patricia Gómez‐Villegas,
  • María Santos-Martín,
  • Ana Sayago,
  • Ángeles Fernández-Recamales,
  • Rubén Fernández de Villarán,
  • Antonio A. Cuadri,
  • José Enrique Martín-Alfonso,
  • Rafael Borja,
  • Fernando G. Fermoso,
  • Rosa León,
  • Juan Urbano

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 109
p. 107546

Abstract

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The current great concern about plastic pollution opens up opportunities for the production of more sustainable polymers. Inverse vulcanization has emerged as a novel procedure to obtain inorganic-organic hybrid polymeric materials. Sulfur is attained as a by-product of oil refining production and makes inverse vulcanization a sustainable process due to a large amount of sulfur without a useful life. In previous studies, vegetable oils were used as a comonomer with sulfur to form copolymers based on sustainable raw material. Nevertheless, compounds from agro-wastes, could be a third comonomer that improves new copolymers bio-applications. In this study, a new series of copolymers with castor oil as vegetable oil and sulfur was formulated by adding a third compound bearing double bonds or heteroatoms. A study was conducted to assess the antimicrobial capacity and antioxidant activity of the copolymers obtained to demonstrate the benefits of adding a new comonomer to improve their bioactivity.

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