Very acidic pHs are not allowed in wood adhesives. The
development
of new self-neutralizing adhesives has therefore become a priority.
The corn starch–citric acid adhesive (CACS) was developed recently
to be an environmentally friendly biomass adhesive. In this work,
we propose to prepare self-neutralizing corn starch adhesives using
the CACS adhesive as the matrix and morpholine/maleic acid (MM) and
morpholine/d-lactic acid (DM) as the neutralizing agents.
The results showed that the MM neutralizing additive is more effective
than the DM in eliminating the residual acid on the glue line. When
the addition of the MM neutralizer was 10%, the pH of the adhesive
system increased to about 4.5 and an adhesive with stable water resistance,
good durability, and high bonding strength and durability acceptable
to the relevant standards could be maintained. Structural analysis
proved that MA was also involved in the esterification reaction of
corn starch (CS). Therefore, the MM-CACS adhesive developed in this
study has the potential to replace traditional petroleum-based adhesives
as a new type of biomass self-neutralizing adhesive.