Abstract
The paper deals with the study of seven selected natural plant oils. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) and thermally stimulated discharge (TSD) methods were used. It has been found that most of the oils tested are in a glassy state at low temperature and have multiple transitions in the low temperature range. DSC shows complex melting-like processes or glass transition. For both DMA and TSD, the scaffold supportive method was used and found as a suitable one. DMA and TSD proved more sensitive than DSC and revealed at least two transitions between − 120 and − 40 °C. In the case of three oils (argan, avocado and sunflower), current reversal was observed by TSD; this symptom cannot be fully explained at the moment.
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Introduction
Polymeric materials from renewable resources have been in the focus of attention in recent years. Plant oils are vegetable-based triglycerides extracted from the seed, nut, kernel or fruit of various plant species. Applications for plant oils exist in numerous industries, including but not limited to the food, nutritional supplement, personal care, cosmetic, plastic industries, etc. Ecological factors are continuously gaining importance in our society; the subjective criteria are the most environmental compatibility between additives and polymers. Vegetable oils have been used as lubricants [1,2,3] and plasticizers [4,5,6] in their natural or epoxidized forms. In this research, we investigated seven different plant oils: argan, avocado, castor, rapeseed (canola), olive, palm and sunflower oils.
Liquefaction or melting point of plant oils is as used in chemistry (also known as freeze point and glass transition point), and this is the temperature at which a given solid material changes from a solid to a liquid state, or melts [7]. Thermodynamically, the pour point (or melting point) can vary by temperature (T) and pressure (P) or both (T–P). Pour point is an important property of plant oils; this parameter is usually used to characterize them in the food and lubricant industries. In the literature, numerous studies deal with the information about pour points, but in most cases without the description of applied measurement methods. One of the most widely used methods for determining the pour point of fluids and oils is differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Tseretely [8] found glass transitions in gelatins using DSC. While DSC is easy to use for the investigation of fluid substances, mechanical and electrical methods are hardly ever applied. Corriea [9] tested low molecular weight liquids and glassy solids, such as phenyl salicylate, glycerol and maltitol, by TSD and resolved the relaxation processes by thermal sampling method. Bansak [10] used a high-frequency AC dielectric method in the 10 MHz to 3 GHz range for the determination of relaxation processes of rapeseed oil. However, the effective frequency of TSD is at least 10 orders of magnitude lower; therefore, TSD has a much better resolving power [11] than the AC dielectric one.
Vegetable oils are characterized also by the fatty acids that constitute the triglycerides. All triglyceride molecules can be broken down into a molecule of glycerol and three molecules of fatty acid. The chain length, degree and position of the unsaturated bond vary greatly depending on the type of oilseed from which the oil was extracted. Presumably, the different fatty acid contents of plant oils will cause different relaxation processes during the DSC, DMA and TSC investigations.
Experimental
Materials
All oils tested were commercial products. The list of oils is given in Table 1. This table also contains the published melting (freezing, pour) points and the actual fatty acid content as well. Fatty acid composition of tested oils was determined by gas chromatography after transesterification with methanol [12].
For TSD measurements, 60 gm−2 borosilicate glass fiber filter of 0.2 mm thickness and 2.6 μm nominal pore size and 87 ± 2% pore volume (SIGMA F7769) was used as scaffolding material described in [13, 14].
For DMA tests, 1.6-mm-thick 150 gm−2 80% viscose 20% natural cellulose-based non-woven textile (Suprawisch, Germany) was used as a scaffold. Its pore volume is 92 ± 3%. Figure 1 shows the SEM image of this textile.
Instruments and test methods
For DSC measurements a Mettler Toledo DSC 823e instrument was used with about 10 mg sample in a standard 40 μL aluminum crucible. The tests were carried out in the temperature range of − 120 to 20 °C with liquid nitrogen cooling using a heating rate of 10 °C min−1. Heat flow was plotted by the standard software of the instrument then redrawn.
Dynamic mechanical measurements were carried out with a Rheometric Scientific DMTA MK-III instrument in single cantilever mode at 1 Hz frequency and 64 μm peak-to-peak amplitude. Heating rate was 2 °C min−1. The specimens were textile strips soaked with the plasticizer to be tested. Because the thickness and oil quantity are not exactly known, the modulus cannot be calculated accurately. However, the relative error is the same for both E’ and for E’’; therefore, the mechanical loss factor (tgδ) is exact.
Setaram TSCII instrument was used for the TSD measurements with a cell supplied with that instrument [14]. Borosilicate glass filter disks of 7 mm diameter were soaked with the plasticizer and put into the standard cell. The weight of the glass filter is 2.3 mg saturated with about 8 to 10 mg plant oil. Polarization temperature was 50 °C, cooling to − 120 °C under 500 V mm−1 field. Both cooling and heating rates were 5 °C min−1; the heat transfer medium was helium gas. More details of the test, the instrument and the evaluation method are described in [15].
After transesterification, fatty acid methylesters were obtained as solutions in n-hexane. By the gas chromatographic analysis, the solutions were performed with an Agilent 7890 (5975C) GC–MS instrument using RT 2560 column and helium carrier gas. (fatty acids below 1% are not listed in Table 1).
Results
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)
DSC results of the seven oils tested are summarized in Fig. 2. DSC curve of castor oil shows regular glass transition at − 63 °C; curves of the other oils show melting-like endothermic peaks. These peaks are complex, at least doublets. It is unambiguous in the case of argan, avocado and sunflower oil but even the DSC curve of rapeseed oil must be a composite one. Resolving of these processes was not carried out, but temperatures of two maxima are listed in Table 2, if any. The DSC curves with exception of sunflower oil do not contain any evaluable transition below − 60 °C.
Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA)
In the case of DMA tests, the mechanical loss factor (tgδ) versus temperature curves are plotted in Fig. 3 shifted over each other. Interestingly, these curves show multiple transitions; tgδ curves contain three maxima and two maxima, that is, two processes below − 40 °C. The exception is the castor oil as in the case of DSC as well. It shows a single, strong glass transition in accordance with DSC. The peak temperature is higher than the midpoint of the DSC step; however, dynamic methods always result in higher values because of the higher effective frequency. The flat low temperature part of tgδ of castor oil proves that the low-temperature peaks cannot originate from the cellulose scaffold. (The apparent E′ of neat cellulose scaffold is 1 MPa while its tgδ is 0.06.)
Peak positions of the weak transitions were determined over linear baseline using our peak searching program. DMA peak temperatures are also summarized in Table 2.
Thermally stimulated discharge (TSD)
All TSD curves are normalized to 1 kV mm−1 polarizing field and 30cm2 electrode area [15] and are shown in Figs. 4–10; the raw curves are plotted in solid-resolved transitions in different styles: dotted and dashed lines. Although the pore volume of borosilicate scaffold is known (87 ± 2%.), further correction was not applied. The depolarization current of the borosilicate filter is less than 1 pA until 0 °C and less than 5 pA at 50 °C [14].
TSD has a very low effective frequency; therefore, a good resolving power is expected. Where it was possible, we carried out the resolving transition of the obtained depolarization curves. Two main peaks are listed in Table 2; relaxation strength values contain the\(\Delta \varepsilon\) sub-transitions as well. More detailed data of resolved transitions are listed in Table 3.
In the case of three oils (argan, avocado and sunflower), current reversal was also observed. Our evaluation program is not prepared for analysis in such an occurrence. In this case, the calculated relaxation strength is negative. We suppose that some kind of structural rearrangement takes place; otherwise, it is against the basic laws of physics. Explaining this incident needs further research.
All oils tested have transitions in the low temperature (− 120 to − 50 °C) range. Castor oil also shows low-intensity peaks, even as it has shown neither by DSC nor by DMA-detectable transitions. The main transition of castor oil lies at − 63 °C. It is the most uniform triglyceride; more than 90% of its fatty acids are ricinoleic acid. All other oils have more complex TSD curves. Main transition of palm oil is doubled (s. Fig. 9.), and both transitions are complex.
Palm oil at room temperature is a grease-like solid; accordingly, one of its twin peaks occur in the room temperature range (23.6, 27.1 °C).
Conclusions
Using scaffolds of high porosity allows simple execution for both DMA and TSD measurements. Neither the borosilicate for the TSD nor the cellulose for the DMA tests produced artifacts. Because the DMA tgδ curve of castor oil does not contain any transition below its glass transition, lower temperature peaks of other oils must be originating from the oil and not from the cellulose scaffold.
Because depolarization current of borosilicate glass filter is less than 1 pA below 0 °C [15], low-temperature transitions are also originated from the oil.
We suggest that the origin of these low-temperature transitions is a small-scale conformational movement of few carbon atom length chains. Length and symmetry of these segments depend on the distance from polar groups, for example, the ester groups.
Although the fatty acid composition of oils was determined, the exact triglyceride structure is unknown. Three different fatty acids can form 15 different triglycerides; therefore, the structure of plant oils is more complicated than expected. Considering the fatty acids below 5%, the number of possible compounds is much higher.
Castor oil has the most uniform fatty acid composition. Interestingly, in spite of the most regular structure, it shows typical glass transition and not crystalline melting. Other than that, glass transition can only be detected by the TSD method. Although ricinoleic acid is a hydroxy acid, the relaxation strength of glass transition is not as high as expected. In spite of its higher polarity, the –OH group might hinder the conformational movements at low temperatures.
The current reversal may be an important occurrence but current studies cannot answer the question: What is the reason for this symptom? In general, a current reversal occurs in the case of layered samples or in the presence of an air gap. Air gap can be excluded in the electrode arrangement used. Partial solidification might produce phase separation building up locally layered structures. It can be visually observed in case of some animal fats. This satisfies the condition of nonzero internal field. We suppose that low-temperature X-ray diffraction could help to elaborate, but this method is not available for us at present.
Test results and literature values are summarized in Fig. 11. It shows that the results of the present study are sometimes far from the literature values. We take it for important that even in these relatively low molecular weight material several relaxation processes appear, and it is worth to continue this research. The nature of transitions below − 40 °C could be revealed by testing the pure triglycerides.
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Acknowledgements
The research was carried out as part of the EFOP-3.6.1-16-2016-00011 “Younger and Renewing University—Innovative Knowledge City—institutional development of the University of Miskolc aiming at intelligent specialization” project implemented in the framework of the Széchenyi 2020 program. The realization of this project is supported by the European Union, co-financed by the European Social Fund. The authors also acknowledge the BorsodChem Zrt for allowing the execution of part of this project at their Technological Support laboratory; and additionally Gábor Muránszky at the Institute of Chemistry who helped to carry out gas chromatography measurements.
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Tamási, K., Marossy, K. Combined thermal analysis of plant oils. J Therm Anal Calorim 147, 2047–2054 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-020-10470-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-020-10470-y