Bakelite PF 6204 K

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Bakelite PF 6204 K

  • Effects of physicochemical properties of phenolic resin on its foaming behavior
    Aug 07, 2025
    Carbon foam, a functional carbonaceous material with a honeycomb structure, not only boasts excellent properties such as low density, high strength, oxidation resistance, and adjustable thermal conductivity, but also boasts excellent processability. Therefore, it can be used as a thermal conductor, insulator, catalyst carrier, biosolidifier, and absorber. It holds broad application prospects in military applications, energy-saving building insulation, chemical catalysis, biological wastewater treatment, and energy. Carbon foam can be sorted into two kinds—one that lets heat pass through easily (thermally conductive) and another that stops heat from passing through (thermally insulating). The difference lies in how much the original carbon material has been turned into graphite. Mesophase pitch and phenolic resin are two typical carbonaceous precursors for producing high- and low-thermal-conductivity carbon foams, respectively. Currently, both thermosetting and thermoplastic phenolic resins are high-quality carbonaceous precursors for producing low-thermal-conductivity carbon foam. Using phenolic resin as the raw material, a phenolic resin foam can be produced by adding a blowing agent and a curing agent and foaming at normal pressure. Carbon foam is then produced by high-temperature carbonization. The compressive strength of this carbon foam is below 0.5 MPa, which restricts how it can be used.   When Phenolic Resin 2402 is used as the raw material, the pores of the carbon foam produced at different foaming pressures are all nearly spherical (Figure 6). Since no foaming agent is added, the foaming process follows a self-foaming mechanism, whereby the matrix material undergoes a cracking reaction at a certain temperature, generating corresponding small molecular gases. As gases form, they gather and grow into pores. The viscosity, structure, volume, shape, and gas production rate of the base material change as cracking gas is produced. This means the structure of pores in carbon foam depends on the base material's viscosity, gas production rate, volume, how quickly its viscosity changes, and outside pressure within the foaming temperature range. At foaming temperatures between 300 and 425°C, 2402 phenolic resin makes lots of cracking gas (Figure 3(a)) and has low viscosity (<2×104Pa·s, Figure 4(d)). Because of this, surface tension causes the pores to be round. When the foaming pressure is 1.0 MPa, the low outside pressure causes bubbles to merge and grow, leading to larger pore sizes (500-800 μm). Also, the larger pores mean the carbon foam has thinner connections and many pores are close to becoming open cells (Figure 6(a)).   When the foaming pressure goes up to 3.5 MPa, the pore size of the carbon foam goes down (300-500 μm), the connections get thicker, and the pore structure is more consistent (Figure 6(b)). If the foaming pressure keeps increasing to 5.0 MPa, the pore size keeps going down, but the consistency of the pore structure starts to get worse (Figure 6(c)). At a foaming pressure of 6.5 MPa, the pore structure of the carbon foam keeps getting worse, but the pore density goes up (Figure 6(d)).   When the foaming temperature goes above 425°C, the viscosity of the 2402 phenolic resin quickly goes up. The foaming pressure clearly has an important impact on how consistent the pore structure is and how dense the carbon foam is. If the foaming pressure is less than the pressure inside the bubble, the cracking gas produced later can still overcome the base material's viscosity and keep gathering and growing in the already formed bubble. This results in a fairly consistent pore structure in the bubble, but no new bubbles will form. But, if the foaming pressure is high enough, the cracking gas produced later can only form new, smaller bubbles at the connections of the already formed bubbles or in the base material, which makes the pore structure of the foamed carbon worse and increases the pore density.   Conclusion (1) The way thermoplastic phenolic resin (resin for refractory) foams is based on its own reaction. How well it foams depends on the conditions (pressure, temperature, and time). It's also influenced by how the molecules interact, considering their size, distribution, how they lose weight when heated, and how their viscosity changes with temperature. Viscosity and temperature are key. (2) When heated to 300-420°C, 2402 Phenoic formaldehyde resin breaks down fast, making a lot of gas. If the material's viscosity is below 2×104 Pa·s at this point, the resulting foamed carbon has good bubbles that are round and evenly spaced. (3) Lower pressures when foaming help make foamed carbon with consistent pores. Higher pressures stop the gas from clumping together and getting bigger, which causes more bubbles to form. This makes the pore structure uneven and increases how many bubbles there are.   Website: www.elephchem.com Whatsapp: (+)86 13851435272 E-mail: admin@elephchem.com
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