BECAS
MURATORE Florencia
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
SUPERCRITICAL CO2-ASSISTED IMPREGNATION OF PLA FILMS WITH R-CARVONE. II: EFFECT OF PROCESS VARIABLES ON MECHANICAL BEHAVIOR
Autor/es:
MURATORE, FLORENCIA; MIRANDA-VILLA PATRICIA P.; LUJAN, LAUTARO; GAÑAN, NICOLAS A.; GOÑI MARÍA LAURA; MARTINI, RAQUEL E.
Reunión:
Congreso; VI Iberoamerican Conference on Supercritical Fluids : Prosciba; 2023
Resumen:
Supercritical CO2-assisted impregnation has been investigated for several years as an emergingtechnology for the incorporation of active compounds into polymers for different applications.In particular, the incorporation of natural-occurring compounds with antimicrobial,antioxidant, and/or insecticidal activities into flexible polymer films appears as an interestingstrategy to obtain active materials for food preservation. In addition, the food packagingindustry has shown an ever-increasing interest in the use of biodegradable materials, such aspolylactic acid (PLA), aiming to gradually decrease the use of petroleum-based polymers,which nowadays represents an environmental problem. In this sense, the supercriticalimpregnation of PLA films with R-(–)-carvone, a compound with known antimicrobial andinsecticidal activity, was studied as a route to develop an active material for food packagingapplications. The influence of process variables on the impregnation yield, release kinetics, andthermal and crystallinity properties was previously studied [1,2]. In this work, a systematicstudy of the effect of the supercritical processing and the incorporation of R-(–)-carvone on themechanical behavior of PLA films was assessed.Commercial films of PLA were kindly provided by Converflex (ARCOR Group, Argentina),while R-(–)-carvone (98% purity) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (Germany) andindustrial extra-dry carbon dioxide (water content ≤ 10 ppm v/v) was from Linde (Argentina).The supercritical processing of PLA films with and without the addition of carvone wasperformed in batch mode, using a lab-scale high-pressure system described before [1] Threeprocess variables were evaluated: scCO2 density (278-683 kg.m-3), temperature (40-60 °C),and depressurization rate (0.6-6.0 MPa.min-1). All runs were performed in duplicate, using acontact time of 2 h and a carvone/PLA mass ratio of 0 or 0.5.Tensile properties were analyzed in a universal testing machine (Instron, USA), according toASTM D 882–12. The statistical effect of the process variables on elastic modulus (EM),tensile strength (TS), and elongation at break (E%) was assessed by ANOVA testing (p < 0.05).Neat PLA films showed a brittle behavior, presenting high EM (1606.7 ± 168.9 MPa), and lowE% and TS (E% = 11.6 ± 8.3 %, TS = 25.4 ± 2.0 MPa). The samples treated with scCO2, inabsence of carvone, presented similar tensile behavior (EM = 1285 – 1749 MPa), but withhigher TS (25.5 – 38.9 MPa) and E% (45.4 – 123.4 %) values. The increase in tensile strengthcould be attributed to the higher crystallinity degrees of processed samples (~3% for neatsamples and ~25–30% for treated samples, as reported in the first part of this study [2]). On theother hand, higher elongation values, opposite to that expected for higher crystallinities, can beexplained by the relaxation of tensions imposed by stretching during the PLA filmmanufacturing, due to the plasticization induced by scCO2. ANOVA testing suggested thatdepressurization rate has no statistical effect on the mechanical behavior of pressurizedsamples. On the other hand, scCO2 density showed a significant effect on EM and TS,decreasing their values for higher densities. Furthermore, temperature presented a significanteffect on TS and E%, decreasing both properties as temperature increases.The incorporation of carvone was also studied, obtaining films with ~6–30 carvone wt% [1].These samples showed higher E% and lower TS, compared to the pressurized samples withoutthe addition of carvone. The higher changes were observed at lower CO2 density, conditionsthat favor the carvone impregnation. According to ANOVA testing, for these samples, scCO2density showed a significant positive effect on all responses, increasing the value of EM, TS,and E% for higher densities. On the other hand, the temperature presented a significant effectonly on EM and TS, decreasing both properties as temperature increases. Finally,depressurization rate showed an effect only on EM and E% obtaining higher EM and lower E%when fast depressurization is used. Furthermore, a decrease in EM was observed as the carvoneamount increased in the polymer matrix, probably due to an increase of free volume in theamorphous phase introduced by the higher plasticizer effect due to the presence of carvone.Particularly, EM suddenly decays at a carvone amount of 10 wt%, obtaining values around 200MPa and lower than 50 MPa for higher additive content, suggesting that phase separation ofthe additive starts at this concentration, as observed in the thermal behavior study [2]. Finally,the results obtained here may provide useful information for broadening the knowledge of theindividual effect of the process variables and the amount of additive incorporated into thepolymer matrix on the mechanical behavior of PLA films.