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Myth: Soy Foam is the only foam using agricultural material so it is the only foam
enviromentally freindly.
Fact: Virtually all spray polyurethane foams contain agricultural material.
Question: Are you using an agricultural-based spray foam or a petroleum-based foam?
Answer: Yes. The fact of the matter is that virtually all commercially available spray foams are formulated using both renewable agricultural products and petroleum based products. Spray polyurethane foam is produced on site from the reaction of two components: A-component (polymeric isocyanate) and B-component (a blend of polyols and other materials).
The A-component (polymeric isocyanate) is manufactured from petroleum feed stocks. Therefore, every spray polyurethane foam system is, at a minimum, half petroleum-based.
The B-component is more difficult to define because it is formulated with the following ingredients:
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Polyols
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Blowing agents
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Flame retardants
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Catalysts
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Surfactants
The blowing agents, flame retardants, catalysts and surfactants are the products of complex chemical manufacturing steps employing a myriad of feed stocks. In general, these materials can be categorized as being petroleum- or mineral based.
Most polyols are manufactured from sucrose-based or oil-based agricultural materials or from recycled post-consumer and post-industrial P E T (polyethylene terephthalate). These agricultural and recycled materials are reacted with petroleum based reactants to form the polyol mixtures used in spray polyurethane foams. Therefore, the only portion of the spray polyurethane foam formulation that contains agricultural products is a fraction of the polyol. The remainder of the mix is petroleum/mineral-based.
Since virtually all spray polyurethane foams contain agricultural-based polyols, the
only questions remaining are: What crops? How Much?
Some agricultural -based polyols are manufactured from oils derived from soy beans. Others are manufactured from sucrose (sugars) derived from corn, sugar beets or sugar cane. In any event, all these polyols employ renewable, agricultural raw materials.
These agricultural oils and sugars must be reacted with petroleum-based materials to form the polyols needed to make spray polyurethane foam. Therefore, only a portion of the polyol is actually derived from agricultural materials.
The percentage of agricultural materials in the final foam mix depends on many factors and varies from formulation to formulation. Generally, spray polyurethane foams will contain 10 to 20% agriculturally derived materials by weight.
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