Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8333549 | International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Three non-wood celluloses, hemp bast holocellulose, and commercial bamboo and bagasse bleached kraft pulps, were oxidized by 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl radical (TEMPO)-mediated oxidation in water at pH 10. The water-insoluble TEMPO-oxidized celluloses thus obtained were converted to aqueous dispersions of TEMPO-oxidized cellulose nanofibrils (TOCNs) and then to self-standing TOCN films. Weight recovery ratios of the TEMPO-oxidized celluloses decreased to 70-80% and their carboxylate contents reached 1.5-1.7 mmol gâ1 by the TEMPO-mediated oxidation. The viscosity-average degrees of polymerization remarkably decreased from 800-1100 to 200-480 by partial depolymerization occurring during the oxidation, depending on the non-wood celluloses used as the starting materials. The average lengths and widths of the TOCNs were estimated to be 500-650 nm and 2.4-2.9 nm, respectively, from their atomic force microscopy images. The self-standing TOCN films had high light-transparencies (>87% at 600 nm), high tensile strengths (140-230 MPa), high Young's moduli (7-11 MPa), low coefficients of thermal expansion (4-6 ppm Kâ1) in spite of low densities of 1.4-1.7 g cmâ3. In particular, the TOCN films prepared from the hemp bast holocellulose had clearly high works of fracture (~30 MJ mâ3), whereas those prepared from other two non-wood celluloses had 2-8 MJ mâ3.
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Authors
Buapan Puangsin, Quanling Yang, Tsuguyuki Saito, Akira Isogai,