Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7791211 | Carbohydrate Polymers | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Cellulose-I swells considerably in phosphoric acid, and converts to amorphous cellulose via a cellulose-II transition state. Controlled oxidation of cellulose-I to 6-carboxycellulose (6CC) using HNO3-H3PO4-NaNO2 oxidation system led to the selective production of 6CC's of varying carboxyl contents (1.7-22%) as well as various shapes and sizes (macro-sized fibrils of several micron length and/or spherical nanoparticles of 25-35Â nm), depending on the reaction conditions. 6CC's having less than 14% carboxyl content were largely in cellulose-II form (WAXRD values in-between cellulose I and cellulose II), whereas at 14-22% the 6CC's were largely amorphous; only trace crystallinity was observed at 19% and 22% carboxyl 6CC. Spherical nanoparticles retained a high degree of crystallinity having cellulose-I structure, whereas the macro-sized fibrils were largely converted to cellulose-II structure. Analysis by WAXRD as well as by CP-MAS 13C NMR studies gave similar conclusions. Reduced molecular weight with progressive oxidation, including presence of oligomers, was also evident from an increase in the reducing-end carbon peak at â¼92Â ppm. For high oxidation levels (>14%) the NMR 92-96Â ppm peaks disappeared on extracting with dilute alkali, due to soluble oligomers being removed.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Authors
Priyanka R. Sharma, Pattuparambil R. Rajamohanan, Anjani J. Varma,