R. Broos et al., Endurance of polyurethane automotive seating foams under varying temperature and humidity conditions, CELL POLYM, 19(3), 2000, pp. 169-204
The long-term comfort and durability properties of the flexible moulded foa
ms used in many forms of transportation seating are a subject of increasing
interest to foam moulders and seat producers. In previous contributions we
have demonstrated the broad range of performance that can be expected from
the well established and finely tuned chemistries (Hot Cure, TDI HR, MDI H
R and TM-20 HR) currently used to make moulded seating foams all around the
world. Existing and proposed new specifications for load bearing and other
fatigue losses have necessitated a new look at the fundamental understandi
ng of why foam properties change with temperature and humidity: the mechano
-sorptive properties.
The polymer morphology of foam specimen representative for the commercially
available types has been determined by a combination of spectroscopic tech
niques: DMS, FT-IR, SAXS and TEM. A rationale is presented for the formatio
n of the observed morphologies during reactive processing based on the theo
ry of spinodal decomposition and a morphological picture is proposed encomp
assing the measured morphological parameters.
To get to the details of how temperature and moisture effect the mechanical
response of a polyurethane network, we studied compression sets over a wid
e range of conditions and correlated those data with eventual morphology ch
anges obtained from spectroscopic studies and with traditional dynamic fati
gue tests conducted in similar conditions. Additional insight into the reor
ganization of the polymer networks was gained from detailed analysis of the
foam's dynamic mechanical performance under the influence of transient moi
sture conditions. Specifically the energy loss associated with moisture ind
uced network reorganization has been measured.