In the recent past chlorinated and fluorinated blowing agents were commonly used. More recently and against a backdrop of environmental pollution and global warming concerns, Pentanes now account for more than 50% of all blowing agents used in the Polyurethane (PU) and Polyisocyanurate (PIR) industry. Whereas pure Pentanes and their binary Pentane blends are widely used, blends of all three isomers are rare and not described in scientific literature. This notwithstanding, ternary blends may have advantages for insulation board manufacturing that have so far not been identified. As the only European company that is in a position to manufacture all three Pentane isomers - n-Pentane, iso-Pentane and Cyclopentane – Haltermann Carless has a great interest to evaluate the potential benefits of tenary Pentane blends and has therefore conducted a study on this.
Insulation materials require a blowing agent to achieve the desired foaming for insulation performance. However, depending on the isomer used, the performance and properties of the foams can vary significantly. High-performance Pentanes and Pentane blends are therefore of great interest to manufacturers of PU and PIR foams. Thus, what advantages could blends of all three isomers - n-Pentane, iso-Pentane and Cyclopentane - offer? Haltermann Carless has been researching just that.
To better understand the behaviour of tenary Pentane blends, a series of experiments were set-up to further investigate this. For our experiment a standard PIR formulation was used to compare the performance of the different Pentanes and blends. These experiments were planned and evaluated with the help of a design-of-experiment (DOE) software. Haltermann Carless used the services of a specialised external laboratory to conduct the experiments. The behaviour of the PIR and the Pentanes during the foaming process was recorded. In further steps, the fresh foam was examined for its insulation properties, artificially aged, and re-examined. The programme suggested ten blends and the three pure pentanes for foaming (fig. 1, tab. 1).
Source: Haltermann Carless
Attention was paid to the following:
After creating then blends, all samples were analysed for vapour pressure, initial and final boiling point. The results of each experiment were fed into the DOE programme, presenting the analysis of the data as a heat map (fig. 2). Initial and final boiling point showed quite linear behaviour. The blends followed very much the trend set by the pure Pentanes (fig. 3 and 4).
Source: Haltermann Carless
Conductivity of heat was measured parallel to the upstream of the foam (fig. 5). Two sets of data were measured at 15 °C and 25 °C. The density is very similar in all cases and it can be assumed that the difference has little impact on the heat conductivity. The best result was obtained with pure Cyclopentane. After ageing the foam for 48 h at 70 °C, the result was different (fig. 6).
The fit of the data was quite good in the case of dimensional stability (fig. 7). Surprisingly, the blend of all three Pentanes in equal parts has an acceptable stability, although performing less optimally in the case of heat conductivity. iso-Pentane/n-Pentane blends have the best stability over time.
Source: Haltermann Carless
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The three pure Pentanes showed a performance as expected. Literature, experimental results and model are consistant with the findings. The Pentanes blends showed mostly the expected behaviour but also revealed some interesting details.
Our experimental approach includes comparable basic set up of a few experiments, but the interpretation shows potential for ternary Pentane blends to be investigated as blowing agent for more applications. Ternary Pentane blends show potential for excellent long-term performance, an important fact in building construction.