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Microplastics are an emerging anthropogenic pollutant risk with a significant body of research dedicated to understanding the implications further. To generate the databases required to characterize the impact of microplastics on our environment, and improve recovery and recycling of current plastic materials, we need rapid, in-line characterization that can distinguish individual polymer types. Here, autofluorescence spectroscopy was investigated as an alternative characterization method to the current leading techniques based on vibrational spectroscopy. It was confirmed that the autofluorescence of seven common textile polymers (acrylic, polyester, nylon, polyethylene, polypropylene, cellulose/cotton, wool) arose due to the cluster-triggered emission phenomenon. Both simulated polymer aging via photooxidation and dyeing of the polymers were found to affect the resultant autofluorescence spectra. A total of 1485 spectra from 39 unique sample groups (polymer type, colour, and degree of photooxidation) were analysed via machine learning (k-means cluster analysis). Correct identification of the polymer type was achieved in 71% of the cases from only eight input values (normalized intensity values at three autofluorescence emission wavelengths, the total autofluorescence emission intensity, the sample RGB colour values, and the sample shape). This represents a significant step towards automated polymer identification at the sub-second time scales required for the in-line characterization of microplastics.
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Different cellulose nanocrystal (CNC) forms (dried vs never-dried) can lead to different degrees of CNC reassembly, the formation of nanofibril-like structures, in nanocomposite latex-based pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) formulations. CNC reassembly is also affected by CNC sonication and loading as well as the protocol used for CNC addition to the polymerization. In this study, carboxylated CNCs (cCNCs) were incorporated into a seeded, semibatch, 2-ethylhexyl acrylate/methyl methacrylate/styrene emulsion polymerization and cast as pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) films. The addition of CNCs led to a simultaneous increase in tack strength, peel strength, and shear adhesion, avoiding the typical trade-off between the adhesive and cohesive strength. Increased CNC reassembly resulted from the use of dried, redispersed, and sonicated cCNCs, along with increased cCNC loading and addition of the cCNCs at the seed stage of the polymerization. The increased degree of CNC reassembly was shown to significantly increase the shear adhesion by enhancing the elastic modulus of the PSA films.
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Adesivos , Celulose , Látex , Nanopartículas , Celulose/química , Adesivos/química , Nanopartículas/química , Látex/química , Polimerização , Nanocompostos/química , PressãoRESUMO
Three size-fractionated samples of pine beetle-killed wood particles were used to prepare lightweight insulative foams. The foams were produced by foam-forming an aqueous slurry containing wood particles (125-1000 µm), a polymer binder, and surfactant, followed by oven drying. The effect of wood particle size on the aqueous foam stability, structure, and performance of insulative foams was investigated. While all aqueous foams were highly stable, aqueous foam stability increased with decreasing particle size. For dry foams, the cell size distribution was similar for all particle sizes as it was primarily controlled by the surfactant; differences occurred within the cell wall structure. A size-structure-property relationship was identified using x-ray micro-computed tomography where smaller particles produced lighter cell wall frameworks, leading to lower densities and decreased thermal conductivity and compressive strength. Larger particles produced denser cell wall frameworks that were more resistant to deformation, although all dry foams had sufficient mechanical properties for use as insulation panels. Thermal conductivity for all wood particle size-fractionated samples was <0.047 W m-1 K-1 making the foams similar to expanded polystyrene/polyurethane and supporting their use as thermal insulation in buildings.
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Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are sustainable particles that are effective at stabilizing emulsions by adsorbing at droplet interfaces and providing a steric barrier to coalescence. However, CNCs have surface charges that reduce the coverage of the emulsion droplets due to the electrostatic repulsion between CNCs. In such cases, adding salt is a typical (and straightforward) way to adjust the formulation so that the charges are screened, allowing increased coverage of the droplets. At the outset of this work, we hypothesized that characterization of the interfacial tension and interfacial shear rheology of the oil-water interface would be correlated to interfacial coverage and therefore predictive of the optimal salt concentration for emulsion stability. Included in the methods section as a useful reference to others is the presentation of a detailed derivation for the equations needed to compute interfacial shear moduli in a custom, double-gap geometry. In contrast to our hypothesis, we found that interfacial tension did not correlate well with emulsion stability and that the native surface-active compounds in corn oil overwhelmed any influence of the CNCs on the interfacial tension. Additionally, we found that interfacial shear rheology (which can be painstakingly difficult to measure) was not a useful tool for formulating these emulsions. This is because at commonly used concentrations of CNCs, the bulk rheology is increased to a much greater degree than that of the interface, making the details of the interfacial rheology unimportant. Finally, we found that at concentrations of CNCs that are typical in industrial processes, characterizing the bulk viscoelastic properties of the aqueous suspending phase without added oil (a relatively simple measurement) is sufficient to predict the influence of NaCl concentration on charge screening between the CNCs and, by extension, increased surface coverage of droplets for greater emulsion stability.
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The scale of production of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) has increased dramatically to meet the growing demand for sustainably sourced materials. This work defines the colloidal stability window for commercially produced carboxylated CNCs (DextraCel) compared to the more traditional sulfated CNCs. Phase diagrams showing the stable, reversibly agglomerated, irreversibly aggregated/sedimented, and colloidal glass "zones" as a function of suspension pH, ionic strength, CNC surface charge content, counterion, and concentration are presented. The pKa of carboxylated CNCs was measured to be 5.1, and suspensions of carboxylated CNCs (0.5-1.5 wt %) were visually stable from pH 3 to 11 (without salt). Carboxylated CNCs were highly sensitive to ionic strength, demonstrating some agglomeration with as little as 5 mM NaCl, supporting that weak acid surface groups and lower charge contents make CNCs more sensitive to solution conditions. Surface charge content had the greatest influence on colloidal stability followed by the counterion; carboxylated CNCs were more stable in the "as-received" sodium form, whereas sulfated CNCs had improved stability in acid form after ion exchange. The stability of carboxylated CNCs with industrially relevant additives (ionic and nonionic surfactants and initiators) was also investigated. Less concentrated suspensions were more colloidally stable, emphasizing that characterization and processing of CNCs favor dilute conditions. If carboxylated CNCs are subjected to conditions outside of their colloidal stability window, simple dilution or pH adjustment does not return them to colloidally stable discrete nanoparticles; however, ultrasonication can redisperse agglomerates. This study offers guidelines for handling carboxylated CNCs to broaden the range of products that can be improved by their incorporation.
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Understanding water absorbency in paper is challenging as fibre swelling and out-of-plane deformation occur simultaneously during liquid imbibition. Liquid absorption is commonly accessed by gravimetric tests, which provides limited information on the local spatial and temporal distribution of fluid in the substrate. In this work, we developed iron tracers to map liquid imbibition in paper by in situ precipitation of iron oxide nanoparticles during passage of the wetting front. The iron oxide tracers were found to be robustly attached to the cellulosic fibres. After liquid absorption tests, absorbency was investigated by mapping the distribution of iron in 3D using X-ray micro-computed tomography (µCT) and in 2D using energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. We demonstrate a difference in tracer distribution between the wetting front and the fully saturated region supporting that imbibition proceeds in two phases, i.e. liquid percolation through the cell wall initially prior to filling of the external pore spaces. Critically, we demonstrate that these iron tracers enhance image contrast and allow for new imaging modalities in µCT for fibre networks.
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To maintain the activity of sensitive biologics during encapsulation by spray drying, a better understanding of deactivation pathways in dried particles is necessary. The effect of solid-air interfaces within dried particles on viral deactivation was examined with three binary excipient blends, mannitol/dextran (MD), xylitol/dextran (XD), and lactose/trehalose (LT). Particles encapsulating human serotype 5 adenovirus viral vector (AdHu5) were produced via both spray drying and acoustic levitation. The particles' internal microstructure was directly visualized, and the location of a viral vector analogue was spatially mapped within the particles by volume imaging using focused ion beam sectioning and scanning electron microscopy. The majority of the viral vector analogue was found at, or near, the solid-air interfaces. Peclet number and crystallization kinetics governed the internal microstructure of the particles: XD particles with minimal internal voids retained the highest viral activity, followed by MD particles with a few large voids, and finally LT particles with numerous internal voids exhibited the lowest viral activity. Overall, AdHu5 activity decreased as the total solid-air interfacial area increased (as quantified by nitrogen sorption). Along with processing losses, this work highlights the importance of surface area within particles as an indicator of activity losses for dried biologics.
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Adenovírus Humanos , Vacinas , Humanos , Dextranos , Pós , Tamanho da Partícula , Inaladores de Pó Seco , Administração por InalaçãoRESUMO
PURPOSE: Intratracheal delivery and consistent dosing of dry powder vaccines is especially challenging in mice. To address this issue, device design of positive pressure dosators and actuation parameters were assessed for their impacts on powder flowability and in vivo dry powder delivery. METHODS: A chamber-loading dosator assembled with stainless-steel, polypropylene or polytetrafluoroethylene needle-tips was used to determine optimal actuation parameters. Powder loading methods including tamp-loading, chamber-loading and pipette tip-loading were compared to assess performance of the dosator delivery device in mice. RESULTS: Available dose was highest (45%) with a stainless-steel tip loaded with an optimal mass and syringe air volume, primarily due to the ability of this configuration to dissipate static charge. However, this tip encouraged more agglomeration along its flow path in the presence of humidity and was too rigid for intubation of mice compared to a more flexible polypropylene tip. Using optimized actuation parameters, the polypropylene pipette tip-loading dosator achieved an acceptable in vivo emitted dose of 50% in mice. After administering two doses of a spray dried adenovirus encapsulated in mannitol-dextran, high bioactivity was observed in excised mouse lung tissue three days post-infection. CONCLUSIONS: This proof-of-concept study demonstrates for the first time that intratracheal delivery of a thermally stable, viral-vectored dry powder can achieve equivalent bioactivity to the same powder, reconstituted and delivered intratracheally. This work may guide the design and device selection process for murine intratracheal delivery of dry powder vaccines to help progress this promising area of inhalable therapeutics.
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Produtos Biológicos , Animais , Camundongos , Administração por Inalação , Pós , Polipropilenos , Aço , Inaladores de Pó Seco , Tamanho da Partícula , AerossóisRESUMO
Modern technology has enabled the isolation of nanocellulose from plant-based fibers, and the current trend focuses on utilizing nanocellulose in a broad range of sustainable materials applications. Water is generally seen as a detrimental component when in contact with nanocellulose-based materials, just like it is harmful for traditional cellulosic materials such as paper or cardboard. However, water is an integral component in plants, and many applications of nanocellulose already accept the presence of water or make use of it. This review gives a comprehensive account of nanocellulose-water interactions and their repercussions in all key areas of contemporary research: fundamental physical chemistry, chemical modification of nanocellulose, materials applications, and analytical methods to map the water interactions and the effect of water on a nanocellulose matrix.
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Blended films comprising poly(butyl acrylate) (PBA)-grafted cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), exhibited more intense photoluminescence (PL) and longer PL emission lifetimes compared to pristine P3HT films. Optical absorption and photoluminescence spectra indicated reduced torsional disorder i.e. enhanced backbone planarity in the P3HT@CNC blended composites compared to the bare P3HT. Such molecule-level geometrical modification resulted in both smaller interchain and higher intrachain exciton bandwidth in the blended composites compared to the bare P3HT, because of reduced interchain interactions and enhanced intrachain order. These results indicate a potential switch of the aggregation behavior from dominant H-aggregates to J-aggregates, supported by Raman spectroscopy. The reorganization of micromolecular structure and concomitant macroscopic aggregation of the conjugated polymer chains resulted in a longer conjugation length for the P3HT@CNC blended composites compared to the bare P3HT. Additionally, this nanoscale morphological change produced a reduction in the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO)-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) energy gap of the blends, evidenced from optical absorption spectra. Classical molecular dynamics simulation studies predicted the probability of enhanced planarity in the polymer backbone following interactions with CNC surfaces. Theoretical results from density functional theory calculations corroborate the experimentally observed reduction of optical bandgap in the blends compared to bare P3HT. The blended composite outperformed the bare P3HT in nitro-group PL sensing tests with a pronounced difference in the reaction kinetics. While the PL quenching dynamics for bare P3HT followed Stern-Volmer kinetics, the P3HT@CNC blended composite exhibited a drastic deviation from the same. This work shows the potential of a functionalized rod-like biopolymer in tuning the optoelectronic properties of a technologically important polymeric organic semiconductor through control of the nanoscale morphology.
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The ability to determine the physicochemical properties of nanoparticles, such as cellulose nanocrystals, in suspension is critically important to maximize their potential. Currently, various techniques are required to ascertain different properties, which results in a laborious analysis procedure. Here, autofluorescence arising from the cluster-triggered emission (CTE) photoluminescence mechanism is utilized as an analytical spectroscopic tool to determine multiple properties from one data acquisition sequence. This study confirms that key properties - including the nanoparticle concentration in suspension, the critical concentration for liquid crystal formation, and the surface charge content - can be obtained simultaneously. Measured values are accurate to within 10% of conventional techniques with average residual errors of 0.4 wt% for the critical concentration, and 11 mmol kg-1 CNC for the surface charge content. This charge-coupled device (CCD) sensor-based methodology is rapid and does not require the addition of further chemicals. These results support the theory behind CTE and represent a new opportunity for quantitatively analysing non-aromatic, heteroatom-containing nanoparticles in flow based on understanding their inter- and intra-particle interactions.
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Celulose , Nanopartículas , Celulose/química , Nanopartículas/química , Suspensões , Análise EspectralRESUMO
PURPOSE: Thermally stable, spray dried vaccines targeting respiratory diseases are promising candidates for pulmonary delivery, requiring careful excipient formulation to effectively encapsulate and protect labile biologics. This study investigates the impact of dextran mass ratio and molecular weight on activity retention, thermal stability and aerosol behaviour of a labile adenoviral vector (AdHu5) encapsulated within a spray dried mannitol-dextran blend. METHODS: Comparing formulations using 40 kDa or 500 kDa dextran at mass ratios of 1:3 and 3:1 mannitol to dextran, in vitro quantification of activity losses and powder flowability was used to assess suitability for inhalation. RESULTS: Incorporating mannitol in a 1:3 ratio with 500 kDa dextran reduced viral titre processing losses below 0.5 log and displayed strong thermal stability under accelerated aging conditions. Moisture absorption and agglomeration was higher in dextran-rich formulations, but under low humidity the 1:3 ratio with 500 kDa dextran powder had the lowest mass median aerodynamic diameter (4.4 µm) and 84% emitted dose from an intratracheal dosator, indicating strong aerosol performance. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, dextran-rich formulations increased viscosity during drying which slowed self-diffusion and favorably hindered viral partitioning at the particle surface. Reducing mannitol content also minimized AdHu5 exclusion from crystalline regions that can force the vector to air-solid interfaces where deactivation occurs. Although increased dextran molecular weight improved activity retention at the 1:3 ratio, it was less influential than the ratio parameter. Improving encapsulation ultimately allows inhalable vaccines to be prepared at higher potency, requiring less powder mass per inhaled dose and higher delivery efficiency.
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Excipientes , Vacinas , Administração por Inalação , Aerossóis/química , Dextranos/química , Inaladores de Pó Seco , Excipientes/química , Manitol/química , Tamanho da Partícula , Pós/químicaRESUMO
Increasing viral dosage within dry powder vaccines reduces the powder mass required to elicit an immune response through pulmonary delivery. This work analyzes how cryoprotective agents affect viral activity, particle properties and thermal stability of a spray dried, inhalable vaccine vector under high viral loading. Stock suspensions of a human serotype 5 adenovirus (AdHu5) vector in either neat phosphate buffered saline (PBS), 10% glycerol in PBS, or 5% trehalose in PBS were added to a mannitol-dextran formulation prior to spray drying. At high viral loading, spray dried powder containing glycerol had a viral titre log loss of 2.8 compared to 0.7 log loss using neat PBS. Powders containing glycerol had a lower glass transition temperature (Tg) compared to all other formulations, permitting greater viral mobility and exposure to heat damage. Inclusion of glycerol also promoted particle cohesion during spray drying and lower yields. Using 5% trehalose as a cryogenic alternative, viral powders had a viral log loss of 1.5 and the highest displayed thermal stability over time. Additionally, trehalose-containing powders had smaller particles with lower water moisture content and higher powder yield compared to glycerol-containing powders. These findings demonstrate the importance of cryoprotective agent selection when developing thermostable vaccine powders.
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Crioprotetores , Vacinas , Administração por Inalação , Aerossóis , Inaladores de Pó Seco , Humanos , Manitol , Tamanho da Partícula , Pós , TrealoseRESUMO
While the improvement of water-based adhesives with renewable additives is important as industry shifts toward more sustainable practices, a complete understanding of how the compatibility between additives and polymers affects adhesive performance is currently lacking. To elucidate these links, cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) were first functionalized via surface-initiated atom-transfer radical polymerization with the hydrophobic polymers poly(butyl acrylate) (PBA) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) to facilitate their incorporation into latex-based pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSAs). Next, PBA latexes were synthesized using seeded semibatch emulsion polymerization with unmodified or polymer-grafted CNCs added in situ at a loading of 0.5 or 1 phm (parts per hundred parts of monomer). Viscosity and electron microscopy suggested that the polymer-grafted CNCs were incorporated inside or on the latex particles. PSAs containing any CNC type had one or more improved properties (compared to the no-CNC "base case"); CNCs with a low degree of polymerization (DP) grafts exhibited improved tack (up to 2.5-fold higher) and peel strength (up to 6-fold higher) relative to PSAs with unmodified CNCs. The best performing PSA contained the low DP PMMA-grafted CNCs, which is attributed to the higher glass transition temperature and the higher wettability of the PMMA grafts compared to PBA, and the more uniform dispersion of polymer-grafted CNCs throughout the PSA film. In contrast, PSAs containing CNCs with high DP grafts resulted in reduced tack and peel strength (compared to low DP grafts) due to enhanced CNC aggregation. Unfortunately, all PSAs containing polymer-grafted CNCs exhibited inferior shear strength relative to PSAs with unmodified CNCs (and comparable shear strength to the no-CNC "base case"). Collectively, these results provide guidelines for future optimization of more sustainable latex-based PSAs.
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Emulsion polymerized latex-based pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSAs) are more environmentally benign because they are synthesized in water but often underperform compared to their solution polymerized counterparts. Studies have shown a simultaneous improvement in the tack, and peel and shear strength of various acrylic PSAs upon the addition of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs). This work uses atomic force microscopy (AFM) to examine the role of CNCs in (i) the coalescence of hydrophobic 2-ethyl hexyl acrylate/n-butyl acrylate/methyl methacrylate (EHA/BA/MMA) latex films and (ii) as adhesion modifiers over multiple length scales. Thin films with varying solids content and CNC loading were prepared by spin coating. AFM revealed that CNCs lowered the solids content threshold for latex particle coalescence during film formation. This improved the cohesive strength of the films, which was directly reflected in the increased shear strength of the EHA/BA/MMA PSAs with increasing CNC loading. Colloidal probe AFM indicated that the nano-adhesion of thicker continuous latex films increased with CNC loading when measured over small contact areas where the effect of surface roughness was negligible. Conversely, the beneficial effects of the CNCs on macroscopic PSA tack and peel strength were outweighed by the effects of increased surface roughness with increasing CNC loading over larger surface areas. This highlights that CNCs can improve both cohesive and adhesive PSA properties; however, the effects are most pronounced when the CNCs interact favourably with the latex polymer and are uniformly dispersed throughout the adhesive film. This article is part of the theme issue 'Bio-derived and bioinspired sustainable advanced materials for emerging technologies (part 1)'.
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Celulose , Nanopartículas , Adesivos , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , PolimerizaçãoRESUMO
The demand for industrially produced cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) has been growing since 2012, when CelluForce Inc. opened its inaugural demonstration plant with a production capacity of 1 tonne per day. Currently, there are 10 industrial CNC producers worldwide, each producing a unique material. Thus, academic researchers and commercial users alike must consider the properties of all available CNCs and carefully select the material which will optimize the performance of their desired application. To support these efforts, this article presents a thorough characterization of four new industrially produced CNCs including sulfated CNCs from NORAM Engineering and Constructors Ltd. (in cooperation with InnoTech Alberta and Alberta-Pacific Forest Industries Inc.) and Melodea Ltd., as well as carboxylated CNCs from Anomera Inc. and Blue Goose Biorefineries Inc. These materials were benchmarked against typical lab-made, sulfated CNCs. While all CNCs were similar in size, shape, crystallinity, and suspension quality, the sulfated CNCs had a higher surface charge density than their carboxylated counterparts, leading to higher colloidal stability. Additionally, significant differences in the rheological profiles of aqueous CNC suspensions, as well as CNC thermal stability and self-assembly behavior, were observed. As such, this article highlights both the subtle and significant differences between five CNC types and acts as a guide for end-users looking to optimize the performance of CNC-based materials.
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Celulose , Nanopartículas , Benchmarking , Suspensões , ÁguaRESUMO
Hydrophobic polymer-grafted cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) were produced via surface-initiated atom-transfer radical polymerization (SI-ATRP) in two different solvents to examine the role of reaction media on the extent of surface modification. Poly(butyl acrylate)-grafted CNCs were synthesized in either dimethylformamide (DMF) (D-PBA-g-CNCs) or toluene (T-PBA-g-CNCs) alongside a free polymer from a sacrificial initiator. The colloidal stability of unmodified CNCs, initiator-modified CNCs, and PBA-g-CNCs in water, DMF, and toluene was evaluated by optical transmittance. The enhanced colloidal stability of initiator-modified CNCs in DMF led to improved accessibility to initiator groups during polymer grafting; D-PBA-g-CNCs had 30 times more grafted chains than T-PBA-g-CNCs, determined by thermogravimetric and elemental analysis. D-PBA-g-CNCs dispersed well in toluene and were hydrophobic with a water contact angle of 124° (for polymer grafts > 13 kDa) compared to 25° for T-PBA-g-CNCs. The cellulose crystal structure was preserved, and individual nanoparticles were retained when grafting was carried out in either solvent. This work highlights that optimizing CNC colloidal stability prior to grafting is more crucial than solvent-polymer compatibility to obtain high graft densities and highly hydrophobic CNCs via SI-ATRP.
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Celulose , Nanopartículas , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Polimerização , PolímerosRESUMO
The hydrophilic polymer poly[2-(2-(2-methoxy ethoxy)ethoxy)ethylacrylate] (POEG3A) was grafted onto the reducing end-groups (REGs) of cellulose nanocrystal (CNC) allomorphs, and their liquid crystalline properties were investigated. The REGs on CNCs extracted from cellulose I (CNC-I) are exclusively located at one end of the crystallite, whereas CNCs extracted from cellulose II (CNC-II) feature REGs at both ends of the crystallite, so that grafting from the REGs affords asymmetrically and symmetrically decorated CNCs, respectively. To confirm the REG modification, several complementary analytical techniques were applied. The grafting of POEG3A onto the CNC REGs was evidenced by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and the coil-globule conformational transition of this polymer above 60 °C, i.e., its lower critical solution temperature. Furthermore, we investigated the self-assembly of end-tethered CNC-hybrids into chiral nematic liquid crystalline phases. Above a critical concentration, both end-grafted CNC allomorphs form chiral nematic tactoids. The introduction of POEG3A to CNC-I does not disturb the surface of the CNCs along the rods, allowing the modified CNCs to approach each other and form helicoidal textures. End-grafted CNC-II formed chiral nematic tactoids with a pitch observable by polarized optical microscopy. This is likely due to their increase in hydrodynamic radius or the introduced steric stabilization of the end-grafted polymer.
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Cristais Líquidos , Nanopartículas , Celulose , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , PolímerosRESUMO
The trend to replace petroleum-based products with sustainable alternatives has shifted research efforts toward plant-based materials such as cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs). CNCs show promise in numerous applications (e.g., composites and rheological modifiers); however, maximizing their performance often requires surface modifications with complex chemistries and purification steps. Presented here is a novel surface modification method with the potential to tune CNC properties through the in situ deposition of cellulose phosphate oligosaccharides during CNC production. This was achieved by leveraging the selective solubility of oligosaccharides, which are soluble at a low pH (during the CNC hydrolysis) yet become insoluble and precipitate onto CNC surfaces upon increasing pH during quenching. Oligosaccharide-coated CNCs demonstrated subtle changes including higher surface charge densities and lower water adsorption capacities and viscosities than their unmodified counterparts. CNC surface coverage was tuned by controlling the oligosaccharide degree of polymerization. Overall, this fundamental study introduces an easily scalable modification route that opens the door for expanded CNC functionality and applications.
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Celulose , Nanopartículas , Oligossacarídeos , Polimerização , ÁguaRESUMO
To engineer tunable thin-film materials, the accurate measurement of their mechanical properties is crucial. However, characterizing the elastic modulus with current methods is particularly challenging for sub-micrometer thick films and hygroscopic materials because they are highly sensitive to environmental conditions and most methods require free-standing films which are difficult to prepare. In this work, we directly compared three buckling-based methods to determine the elastic moduli of supported thin films: (1) biaxial thermal shrinking, (2) uniaxial thermal shrinking, and (3) the mechanically compressed, strain-induced elastic buckling instability for mechanical measurements (SIEBIMM) method. Nanobiocomposite model films composed of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and polyethyleneimine (PEI) were assembled using layer-by-layer deposition to control composition and thickness. The three buckling-based methods yielded the same trends and comparable values for the elastic moduli of each CNC-PEI film composition (ranging from 15 to 44 GPa, depending on film composition). This suggests that the methods are similarly effective for the quantification of thin-film mechanical properties. Increasing the CNC content in the films statistically increased the modulus; however, increasing the PEI content did not lead to significant changes. For the CNC-PEI system, the standard deviation of elastic moduli determined from SIEBIMM was 2-4 times larger than that for thermal shrinking, likely due to extensive cracking due to the different stress applied to the film when subjected to compression of a relaxed substrate versus the shrinking of a pre-strained substrate. These results show that biaxial thermal shrinking is a reliable method for the determination of the mechanical properties of thin films with a simple implementation and analysis and low sensitivity to small deviations in the input parameter values, such as film thickness or substrate modulus.