Polyurethane foams have gained popularity in the automotive realm, and are now used in high-temperature oil-filter applications.
Starting in the early 1980s, water-blown microcellular flexible foams were used to mold gaskets for automotive panels and air-filter seals, replacing PVC polymers. Further increases in stiffness were obtained by incorporating pre-placed glass mats into the RIM mold cavity, also known broadly as resin injection molding, or structural RIM. This technology was used to make the first plastic-body automobile in the United States, the Pontiac Fiero, in 1983. The addition of fillers, such as milled glass, mica, and processed mineral fibres, gave rise to reinforced RIM (RRIM), which provided improvements in flexural modulus (stiffness), reduction in coefficient of thermal expansion and better thermal stability. Parts of this car, such as the fascia and body panels, were manufactured using a new process called reaction injection molding (RIM), in which the reactants were mixed and then injected into a mold. In 1969, Bayer exhibited an all-plastic car in Düsseldorf, Germany. During the 1960s, automotive interior safety components, such as instrument and door panels, were produced by back-filling thermoplastic skins with semi-rigid foam. In 1967, urethane-modified polyisocyanurate rigid foams were introduced, offering even better thermal stability and flammability resistance. The availability of chlorofluoroalkane blowing agents, inexpensive polyether polyols, and methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) allowed polyurethane rigid foams to be used as high-performance insulation materials. In 1960 more than 45,000 metric tons of flexible polyurethane foams were produced. Monsanto/ Bayer joint venture, also began making polyurethane chemicals. Polyether polyols were cheaper, easier to handle and more water-resistant than polyester polyols, and became more popular. In 1956, DuPont introduced polyether polyols, specifically poly(tetramethylene ether) glycol, and BASF and Dow Chemical started selling polyalkylene glycols in 1957. Linear fibers were produced from hexamethylene diisocyanate (HDI) and 1,4-Butanediol (BDO). These materials were also used to produce rigid foams, gum rubber, and elastomers. Polyisocyanates became commercially available in 1952, and production of flexible polyurethane foam began in 1954 by combining toluene diisocyanate (TDI) and polyester polyols. Early work focused on the production of fibres and flexible foams and PUs were applied on a limited scale as aircraft coating during World War II. The new polymers had some advantages over existing plastics that were made by polymerizing olefins or by polycondensation, and were not covered by patents obtained by Wallace Carothers on polyesters. Otto Bayer and his coworkers at IG Farben in Leverkusen, Germany, first made polyurethanes in 1937. Otto Bayer in 1952 demonstrating his creation This is a sufficiently high volume for it to be regarded as a commodity plastic.
Global production in 2019 was some 25 million metric tonnes, accounting for about 6% of all polymers produced in that year. Both the isocyanates and polyols used to make polyurethanes contain, on average, two or more functional groups per molecule. Since polyurethanes contain two types of monomers, which polymerise one after the other, they are classed as alternating copolymers. Polyurethane polymers are traditionally and most commonly formed by reacting a di- or triisocyanate with a polyol. Of these, foams are the largest single application, accounting for 67% of all polyurethane produced in 2016. These include: rigid and flexible foams, varnishes and coatings, adhesives, electrical potting compounds, and fibres such as spandex and PUL. This chemical variety allows for polyurethanes with very different physical properties, leading to an equally wide range of different applications. In contrast to other common polymers such as polyethylene and polystyrene, polyurethane is produced from a wide range of starting materials ( monomers) and is therefore a class of polymers, rather than a distinct compound. Polyurethane (often abbreviated PUR and PU) referes to a class of polymers composed of organic units joined by carbamate (urethane) links. A kitchen sponge made of polyurethane foam