Issue 6, 2013

A physical cross-linking process of cellulose nanofibril gels with shear-controlled fibril orientation

Abstract

Cellulose nanofibrils constitute the smallest fibrous components of wood, with a width of approximately 4 nm and a length in the micrometer range. They consist of aligned linear cellulose chains with crystallinity exceeding 60%, rendering stiff, high-aspect-ratio rods. These properties are advantageous in the reinforcement components of composites. Cross-linked networks of fibrils can be used as templates into which a polymer enters. In the semi-concentrated regime (i.e. slightly above the overlap concentration), carboxy methylated fibrils dispersed in water have been physically cross-linked to form a volume-spanning network (a gel) by reducing the pH or adding salt, which diminishes the electrostatic repulsion between fibrils. By applying shear during or after this gelation process, we can orient the fibrils in a preferred direction within the gel, for the purpose of fully utilizing the high stiffness and strength of the fibrils as reinforcement components. Using these gels as templates enables precise control of the spatial distribution and orientation of the dispersed phase of the composites, optimizing the potentially very large reinforcement capacity of the nanofibrils.

Graphical abstract: A physical cross-linking process of cellulose nanofibril gels with shear-controlled fibril orientation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Sep 2012
Accepted
28 Nov 2012
First published
18 Dec 2012

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 1852-1863

A physical cross-linking process of cellulose nanofibril gels with shear-controlled fibril orientation

A. B. Fall, S. B. Lindström, J. Sprakel and L. Wågberg, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 1852 DOI: 10.1039/C2SM27223G

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