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Research Article

Glucose-stabilized polyvinyl acetate homopolymer-based wood adhesive: synthesis and characterization

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Received 07 Aug 2023, Accepted 29 Apr 2024, Published online: 10 May 2024
 

Abstract

The purpose of this work was to study the synthesis and characterization of an adhesive based on a glucose stabilized polyvinyl acetate homopolymer. Vinyl acetate monomer was stabilised onto liquid glucose using emulsion polymerization, and polymerization happened using potassium persulfate as an initiator. Here, the effects of adding liquid glucose as a stabiliser for adhesives were studied. Therefore, the current research examines whether liquid glucose, introduced at weight-based concentrations of 0.5% and 1.0%, is suitable as a colloid to produce PVAc adhesives for wood. By measuring viscosity, pH, contact angle, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and the pencil hardness test of films, the effect of adding liquid glucose as a colloid on physical, thermal, and mechanical properties was investigated. The shear strength of the PVAc homopolymers applied to wood using emulsions with varied liquid glucose concentrations was measured using a universal tensile machine. As the concentration of liquid glucose increased, the viscosity of the adhesives also considerably increased. Water resistance significantly rose when liquid glucose content increased, as was found by measuring the water contact angle. The use of liquid glucose increased the hardness of PVAc films, which was supported by the glass transition temperature. According to EN 204-205, the tensile shear strength with 1.0% of liquid glucose increased by 63.88% and 45.67%, respectively, over a pristine sample after 6 h of bonding in a dry environment and 24 h in a wet environment. The study’s overall conclusion highlights the higher adhesion capability of PVAc emulsion-based adhesives stabilized by liquid glucose.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai, India, for the support throughout this work.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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