Tomato peels have been proposed as a promising biowaste for producing bio-derived anti-corrosion polymer coatings potentially more sustainable than traditional petrol-based ones. Nonetheless, there is no proof that the cutin monomer, i.e. 10,16-dihydroxy hexadecanoic acid (10,16-diHHDA) largely found in tomato peel, can be used as a curing agent, due to a lack of sufficiently pure samples of this fatty acid. In this work, the cutin monomer was firstly successfully isolated by up-cycling tomato-dried peels with a purity averaging 92 % and a 67 % recovery rate. 10,16-diHHDA was then used as a trifunctional reactive component to develop fully bio-based epoxy coatings formulated with three different epoxidized precursors. Using a phloroglucinol epoxidized precursor, an increase in the ratio between epoxy groups and hydrogen-active nucleophiles increased the glass transition temperature, up to an average of 104 °C, along with enhanced hardness and adhesion to steel and aluminum alloy surfaces. Additionally, all the cutin-derived coatings exhibited higher hydrophobicity than a reference bisphenol-A-containing coating. The most promising bio-based resin formulations were finally used to coat carbon steel samples and the protection ability against corrosion in a 3.5 wt% NaCl solution was assessed through a multi-step electrochemical testing protocol to investigate continuum phenomena at both medium|coating and coating|metal interfaces. As a result, two resin compositions (namely PC_4:1_5 and PC_5:1_3, differing for the amounts of the cutin monomer and catalyst) were identified as the most protective coatings in terms of both instant and long-term performance. Pore resistance, initially ≥ 100 GΩ cm2 on average, double that of the reference petrol-based coating, decreased to a still well-satisfactory 1 GΩ cm2 value even after one week of accelerated aging test. Within the same time frame (i.e., 7 times longer than the recommended period by the ASTM industrial standard test) the water uptake was finally set at <5 % values without any delamination.

Highly pure curing agent from tomato waste for bio-based anti-corrosion epoxy coatings / R. Suriano, M. Magni, B. Tagliabue, V. Re, R. Ciapponi, R. Nasti, M. Cavallaro, G. Beretta, S. Turri, M. Levi. - In: EUROPEAN POLYMER JOURNAL. - ISSN 0014-3057. - 223:(2025 Jan), pp. 113629.1-113629.13. [10.1016/j.eurpolymj.2024.113629]

Highly pure curing agent from tomato waste for bio-based anti-corrosion epoxy coatings

M. Magni
Secondo
;
G. Beretta;
2025

Abstract

Tomato peels have been proposed as a promising biowaste for producing bio-derived anti-corrosion polymer coatings potentially more sustainable than traditional petrol-based ones. Nonetheless, there is no proof that the cutin monomer, i.e. 10,16-dihydroxy hexadecanoic acid (10,16-diHHDA) largely found in tomato peel, can be used as a curing agent, due to a lack of sufficiently pure samples of this fatty acid. In this work, the cutin monomer was firstly successfully isolated by up-cycling tomato-dried peels with a purity averaging 92 % and a 67 % recovery rate. 10,16-diHHDA was then used as a trifunctional reactive component to develop fully bio-based epoxy coatings formulated with three different epoxidized precursors. Using a phloroglucinol epoxidized precursor, an increase in the ratio between epoxy groups and hydrogen-active nucleophiles increased the glass transition temperature, up to an average of 104 °C, along with enhanced hardness and adhesion to steel and aluminum alloy surfaces. Additionally, all the cutin-derived coatings exhibited higher hydrophobicity than a reference bisphenol-A-containing coating. The most promising bio-based resin formulations were finally used to coat carbon steel samples and the protection ability against corrosion in a 3.5 wt% NaCl solution was assessed through a multi-step electrochemical testing protocol to investigate continuum phenomena at both medium|coating and coating|metal interfaces. As a result, two resin compositions (namely PC_4:1_5 and PC_5:1_3, differing for the amounts of the cutin monomer and catalyst) were identified as the most protective coatings in terms of both instant and long-term performance. Pore resistance, initially ≥ 100 GΩ cm2 on average, double that of the reference petrol-based coating, decreased to a still well-satisfactory 1 GΩ cm2 value even after one week of accelerated aging test. Within the same time frame (i.e., 7 times longer than the recommended period by the ASTM industrial standard test) the water uptake was finally set at <5 % values without any delamination.
Metal protection coatings; bisphenol A-free; Agri-food waste; Glass transition temperature; Electrochemistry; Accelerated aging test
Settore CHEM-06/A - Fondamenti chimici delle tecnologie
Settore IMAT-01/A - Scienza e tecnologia dei materiali
   Cutin from tomato-peel waste: green source for plurality of engineered polymer products (CutToPro)
   CutToPro
   FONDAZIONE CARIPLO
   2021-0651
gen-2025
dic-2024
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0014305724008905
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1124635
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