Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1985768 | International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2016 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Keratin micro-tubes were obtained by heating medullated keratin fibres to temperatures above 230 °C under nitrogen atmosphere, when, as documented by microscopy, the cortex (the core of the fibre) melts from the medulla outwards, followed by pyrolysis of the material through the remaining solid cuticle (shell) layer. The resulted hollow tubes from fibres void of cortical material keep the external cuticle structure, as shown by AFM investigation, and the moisture sorption properties of the initial keratin fibre. Despite similar amino-acid compositions of cuticle and cortex the two morphological components differ significantly in their thermal behaviour, which appears to be a “cortex-cuticle thermal stability paradox”.
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Authors
Daniel Istrate, Meriem Er Rafik, Crisan Popescu, Dan E. Demco, Larisa Tsarkova, Franz-Josef Wortmann,