# An Analysis of Foams Produced from Recycled Polyolefins and Low-Cost Foaming Agents: Benchmarking Using Pore Size, Distribution, Shear Effects, and Thermal Properties

**Authors:** Krishnamurthy Prasad, Fareed Tamaddoni Jahromi, Shammi Sultana Nisha, John Stehle, Emad Gad, Mostafa Nikzad

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/polym17091270 · Polymers · 2025-05-06

## TL;DR

This paper compares foams made from recycled plastics and low-cost additives, analyzing their structure and performance against traditional foam materials.

## Contribution

The study introduces low-cost foaming agents and evaluates their impact on foam properties using recycled polyolefins.

## Key findings

- Virgin LLDPE and recycled LDPE showed similar narrow pore size distribution and reduced crystallinity.
- Recycled LLDPE exhibited more pore coalescence due to its mixed phase nature.
- NaB foaming produced lower densities compared to CA due to simpler decomposition pathways.

## Abstract

Foamed specimens were fabricated from virgin and recycled polyethylenes (linear low-density polyethylene, LLDPE, and low-density polyethylene, LDPE) using low-cost citric acid and sodium bicarbonate foaming agents. The foaming agents chosen showed decomposition behaviour either without phase change (sodium bicarbonate, NaB) or liquefaction followed by decomposition (citric acid, CA). The manufactured polyethylene foams were then benchmarked against a polyurethane foam. Two types of mixing were used prior to foaming, viz., solid-state pulverisation or high-shear internal mixing, and the effect of mixing on properties critical for foam viability were analysed. These properties included density, pore size, shape and distribution, crystallinity, and porosity. It was found that the virgin LLDPE and recycled LDPE showed similar trends in terms of narrow pore size distribution and reduced crystallinity, while the recycled LLDPE tended towards more pore coalescence. This difference in behaviour was attributed to the more mixed phase nature of the recycled LLDPE as opposed to the majorly single-phase virgin LLDPE and recycled LDPE. Lowered densities obtained for the NaB foaming compared to CA can be speculated to be because of the ionic and simple NaB decomposition as opposed to the complex radical pathway for the CA decomposition.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** citric acid (PubChem CID 311), sodium bicarbonate (PubChem CID 516892), polyurethane (PubChem CID 6452516)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** sodium bicarbonate (MESH:D017693), CA (MESH:D002118), polyethylenes (MESH:D011095), Polyolefins (MESH:C035051), citric acid (MESH:D019343), LDPE (MESH:D020959), polyurethane (MESH:D011140), LLDPE (-)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12074132/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12074132