Canadian Plastics

Researchers turn sulfur into self-extinguishing flame-retardant plastics

Canadian Plastics   

Materials Research & Development

Developed at the University of Arizona, the high-end thermoplastic elastomer is rubbery, elastic, and moldable compared to stiffer plastics.

A sulfur miner at work. Photo Credit: Adobe Stock/saiko3p

Researchers from the University of Arizona, in Tucson, researchers have developed a way to turn sulfur – the byproduct of fossil fuel refining – into a flame retardant, high-end plastic.

“We are still in the early developmental stages, but this is the first demonstration of a polymer (or plastic) with these properties,” said Jeff Pyun, a professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, who led the team that developed the new material. The team’s work is detailed in Angewandte Chemie, a journal of the German Chemical Society.

When oil and gas are pulled from the ground, they contain a cocktail of chemicals that must be removed during the refining process, so they can burn as cleanly as possible. If sulfur wasn’t removed, it would mix in the atmosphere and contribute to acid rain.

“Every single barrel of oil contains one to five per cent sulfur,” Pyun said. “That’s just for standard oil from typical reserves. Other reserves can contain up to 40 per cent sulfur by weight. Every person that drives is going through their weight or more of sulfur refining every day. You’ve got to take out all of the sulfur. Otherwise, you have environmental problems.”

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In total, 70 million tons of sulfur accumulate each year globally, Pyun said, and storage is a major problem for the oil and gas industry. To manage the load, fossil fuel companies continually search for high-value chemical products that can be made with the sulfur.

Other petrochemicals derived from gas and oil are essential ingredients used to make materials and products people have come to depend on, such as plastics, resins, nylon, synthetic fibres, lubricants, rubber, dyes, detergents, drugs, pesticides, and others.

For 10 years, the UArizona team has been working to give sulfur similar purpose once it has been extracted from fossil fuels. Two years ago, Pyun and his colleagues in his lab created lenses made of sulfur for infrared detectors; and now, they’ve created a high-end thermoplastic elastomer out of sulfur. The material is rubbery, elastic, and moldable compared to stiffer plastics. Other types of thermoplastics are used to make the cushy grips on items such as power tools, pens and toothbrushes.

The researchers’ work was funded by one of Italy’s largest oil companies, Eni, which partnered with the University of Arizona to develop and translate the technology.

According to Pyun, sulfur-based plastics aren’t “green” in the traditional sense, but he said that “anything that we can do that makes this current petroleum refining process even a little bit more sustainable has a big impact, because we’re working with such enormous volumes.”

Importantly, the sulfur plastic created by Pyun and his team is flame-retardant, and immediately self-extinguishes instead of burning and creating heat and smoke. “It really stands out for this reason, because almost all plastics are flammable,” Pyun said. “Most plastics today are very cheap and have excellent mechanical properties that can be tunable over a broad range of products from automobile engine parts to rubber tires, but they’re flammable. Plastics that have really good properties and are flame-retardant, such as this one, are very expensive. What we eventually want are plastics that are low-cost, with good properties, and are flame-retardant.”

Going forward, Pyun and his team hope to make a whole new class of affordable flame-retardant plastics that can be used in even more products; and they’re working with Tech Launch Arizona, the technology commercialization arm of the University of Arizona, to patent and license their invention to take it to the marketplace.

Source: University of Arizona

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