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Imide-modified isocyanurate foams

Imide-Modified Isocyanurate Foams. The imide linkage is a thermally stable linkage, and therefore, imide-modified isocyanurate foams have higher thermal stability and flame retardance than urethane-modified isocyanurate foams. R. Grieve (114) prepared such foams in a one-shot process by reacting a polycarboxylic acid anhydride with an organic polyisocyanate in the presence of a catalytic amount of a monomeric homocyclic polyepoxide and a tertiary amine. [Pg.111]

Modification of cellular polymers by incorporating amide, imide, oxa2ohdinone, or carbodiimide groups has been attempted but only the urethane-modified isocyanurate foams are produced in the 1990s. PUIR foams often do not require added fire retardants to meet most regulatory requirements (34). A typical PUIR foam formulation is shown in Table 6. [Pg.350]

The modification linkages include urethane, amide, imide, carbodiimide and oxazolidone linkages. A urethane-modified isocyanurate foam (trade name Airlite Foam SNB, Nisshinbo, Ind. Inc.) was first applied to the petrochemical industry as a seamless fire-resistant insulant in 1965 (39). [Pg.91]


See other pages where Imide-modified isocyanurate foams is mentioned: [Pg.766]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.111 ]




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