Litcius/Paper detail

A fire-retardant coating for wood made from chitosan itaconate

Nils Münstermann, Oliver Weichold

2024Progress in Organic Coatings9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wood is becoming increasingly popular again due to an increased environmental awareness. However, wood generally needs protection from a number of external influences such as moisture, UV, stains, and also fire. The latter is a particular challenge for building materials because once ignited, untreated wood usually burns down completely without the need for a continuous external heat supply. We have recently developed a sustainable coating based on polymerised chitosan itaconate, which protects wood against moisture, UV, and stains. Free-standing chitosan itaconate films were now found to be non-flammable and do not melt when exposed to fire. Thermogravimetric analyses of these films underscore the importance of polymerisation to increase the thermal stability. When applied to wood surfaces, the coating delays the ignition and the spreading of flames. A single application already reduces the burning rate by one third. With multiple layers of the coating, the samples extinguish as soon as the external flame is removed. • Sustainable coating: Fully bio-based, biodegradable and polymerized chitosan itaconate coating protects wood from fire • Inflammable chitosan itaconate films do not ignite or melt when exposed to fire • Polymerization significantly increases LOI and the thermal stability of the chitosan itaconate films. • Applied on wood the coating delays ignition and flame spread • Single application cuts burn rate by a third and with multiple layers the materials become self-extinguishing.

Topics & Concepts

Fire retardantMaterials scienceChitosanCoatingComposite materialPolymer scienceChemical engineeringForensic engineeringEngineeringNanocomposite Films for Food PackagingFlame retardant materials and propertiesPolymer composites and self-healing