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Catalytic polymer self-cleavage for CO₂ generation before combustion empowers materials with fire safety

Chemistry

Catalytic polymer self-cleavage for CO₂ generation before combustion empowers materials with fire safety

W. Luo, M. Chen, et al.

Discover an innovative approach to enhancing fire safety in polymeric materials through catalytic polymer auto-pyrolysis. Conducted by Wei Luo, Ming-Jun Chen, Ting Wang, Jin-Feng Feng, Zhi-Cheng Fu, Jin-Ni Deng, Yuan-Wei Yan, Yu-Zhong Wang, and Hai-Bo Zhao, this study reveals how potassium salts can transform polyurethane foam to generate CO₂ effectively, providing an internal fire extinguishing mechanism while lowering smoke toxicity.

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Abstract
Polymeric materials, rich in carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen elements, present substantial fire hazards to both human life and property due to their intrinsic flammability. Overcoming this challenge in the absence of any flame-retardant elements is a daunting task. Herein, we introduce an innovative strategy employing catalytic polymer auto-pyrolysis before combustion to proactively release CO₂, akin to possessing responsive CO₂ fire extinguishing mechanisms. We demonstrate that potassium salts with strong nucleophilicity (such as potassium formate/malate) can transform conventional polyurethane foam into materials with fire safety through rearrangement. This transformation results in the rapid generation of a substantial volume of CO₂, occurring before the onset of intense decomposition, effectively extinguishing fires. The inclusion of just 1.05 wt% potassium formate can significantly raise the limiting oxygen index of polyurethane foam to 26.5%, increase the time to ignition by 927%, and tremendously reduce smoke toxicity by 95%. The successful application of various potassium salts, combined with a comprehensive examination of the underlying mechanisms, underscores the viability of this strategy. This pioneering catalytic approach paves the way for the efficient and eco-friendly development of polymeric materials with fire safety.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 28, 2024
Authors
Wei Luo, Ming-Jun Chen, Ting Wang, Jin-Feng Feng, Zhi-Cheng Fu, Jin-Ni Deng, Yuan-Wei Yan, Yu-Zhong Wang, Hai-Bo Zhao
Tags
polymeric materials
fire safety
catalytic polymer auto-pyrolysis
potassium salts
CO₂ generation
polyurethane foam
smoke toxicity
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