Why Lightweight Polymers Matter
Lightweighting is a global trend driven by fuel efficiency regulations (automotive), material cost reduction, and sustainability goals. Polymers are inherently lighter than metals, but further weight reduction is achieved through foaming (gas-filled cellular structure) and structural foam molding. Organic peroxides play two critical roles in lightweight polymer production:
- As foaming agents (azo-free alternatives): Peroxides decompose to generate gases (e.g., methane, tert-butanol) or create voids by controlled degradation.
- As crosslinking agents in foam stabilization: Crosslinking the polymer matrix during foaming prevents cell collapse and enables low-density, high-strength foams.
Peroxide-Based Foaming vs. Chemical Blowing Agents
| Method | Mechanism | Typical Density | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azo blowing agents (ADC) | Thermal decomposition → N2 gas | 30–200 kg/m³ | Low cost, fine cells | Azo residue, limited temp range |
| Peroxide-controlled degradation + physical blowing | Peroxide creates melt fracture / cell nucleation | 40–300 kg/m³ | No chemical residue, tunable | Requires precise control |
| Peroxide crosslinked foam | Crosslinked matrix + physical blowing | 30–150 kg/m³ | Excellent strength-to-weight | Higher cost |
Key Applications of Lightweight Polymers with Peroxides
1. Crosslinked Polyolefin Foams (XPE / XPP)
Crosslinked PE (XPE) and PP (XPP) foams are produced by peroxide crosslinking + physical blowing agent (e.g., butane, isopropanol). The peroxide (typically Perodox DCP or Perodox 101) is mixed into the polymer, which is then crosslinked in a first oven pass, followed by foaming in a second oven pass.
- Density: 30–100 kg/m³
- Applications: Automotive interior trims, thermal insulation, sports mats, packaging.
2. LDPE Foam for Packaging & Insulation
LDPE foam is produced by incorporating a blowing agent (AZO or hydrocarbon) and a crosslinking peroxide into the LDPE melt. The sheet is then passed through an oven where crosslinking and foaming occur sequentially.
Perodox DCP is the standard crosslinking peroxide for LDPE foam. For fine-cell foams, Perodox 101 provides better scorch safety.
3. Structural Foam Molding (Polyolefins & Engineering Plastics)
Structural foam molding uses a chemical blowing agent (CBA) or physical gas (N2, CO2) injected into the polymer melt. Peroxides are sometimes added to increase melt strength (via controlled crosslinking), which stabilizes the foam cells and prevents collapse.
4. PVC Foam for Signage & Construction
PVC foam boards are produced using peroxide initiators (Perodox EHP, Perodox LUNA) that also act as partial foaming agents. The peroxide decomposes during processing, generating small gas volumes that create a micro-cellular structure.
Peroxide Selection for Lightweight Polymer Applications
| Application | Recommended Peroxide | Brand | Decomposition Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| XPE / XPP foam | Dicumyl peroxide | Perodox DCP | 130–180°C |
| Fine-cell LDPE foam | 2,5-Dimethyl-2,5-di(tert-butylperoxy)hexane | Perodox 101 | 140–200°C |
| Foam sheet (EVA-based) | Lauroyl peroxide | Perodox LUNA | 60–100°C |
| Structural foam (PP) | tert-Butyl cumyl peroxide | Perodox 119 | 130–170°C |
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can organic peroxides replace azo blowing agents entirely?
A: Not entirely—azo blowing agents (e.g., ADC) are still the lowest-cost option for many applications. However, peroxides are preferred when crosslinking is also required, or when azo residues are unacceptable (food-contact applications).
Q: What density can I achieve with peroxide-crosslinked foams?
A: XPE foams typically achieve 30–100 kg/m³. With advanced processing (multi-stage oven, precise peroxide control), densities as low as 20 kg/m³ are possible.
Q: Are peroxide-crosslinked foams recyclable?
A: Thermally crosslinked foams are not melt-processable (the crosslinks do not remelt). However, they can be ground and used as filler, or chemically recycling using specialized processes. This is an active area of R&D.
Do Sender Lightweight Polymer Solutions
Shandong Do Sender Chemicals Co., Ltd. provides Perodox® organic peroxides for the full range of lightweight polymer applications—from XPE/XPP foam to structural foam molding. Our technical team assists with peroxide selection, foaming process optimization, and cell-structure analysis. All products meet REACH and ISO 9001 standards.
Contact us to discuss your lightweight polymer application and receive a tailored peroxide recommendation.