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Continuous Processing of Nanocellulose and Polylactic Acid into Multilayer Barrier Coatings.
Koppolu, Rajesh; Lahti, Johanna; Abitbol, Tiffany; Swerin, Agne; Kuusipalo, Jurkka; Toivakka, Martti.
Afiliação
  • Koppolu R; Laboratory of Paper Coating and Converting, Center for Functional Materials , Åbo Akademi University , 20500 Turku , Finland.
  • Lahti J; Paper Converting and Packaging , Tampere University of Technology , 33100 Tampere , Finland.
  • Abitbol T; Bioeconomy-Biorefinery and Energy , RISE Research Institutes of Sweden , 114 28 Stockholm , Sweden.
  • Swerin A; Division of Surface and Corrosion Science, School of Engineering Sciences in Chemistry, Biotechnology and Health , KTH Royal Institute of Technology , 100 44 Stockholm , Sweden.
  • Kuusipalo J; Paper Converting and Packaging , Tampere University of Technology , 33100 Tampere , Finland.
  • Toivakka M; Laboratory of Paper Coating and Converting, Center for Functional Materials , Åbo Akademi University , 20500 Turku , Finland.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(12): 11920-11927, 2019 Mar 27.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30829474
ABSTRACT
Recent years have seen an increased interest toward utilizing biobased and biodegradable materials for barrier packaging applications. Most of the abovementioned materials usually have certain shortcomings that discourage their adoption as a preferred material of choice. Nanocellulose falls into such a category. It has excellent barrier against grease, mineral oils, and oxygen but poor tolerance against water vapor, which makes it unsuitable to be used at high humidity. In addition, nanocellulose suspensions' high viscosity and yield stress already at low solid content and poor adhesion to substrates create additional challenges for high-speed processing. Polylactic acid (PLA) is another potential candidate that has reasonably high tolerance against water vapor but rather a poor barrier against oxygen. The current work explores the possibility of combining both these materials into thin multilayer coatings onto a paperboard. A custom-built slot-die was used to coat either microfibrillated cellulose or cellulose nanocrystals onto a pigment-coated baseboard in a continuous process. These were subsequently coated with PLA using a pilot-scale extrusion coater. Low-density polyethylene was used as for reference extrusion coating. Cationic starch precoating and corona treatment improved the adhesion at nanocellulose/baseboard and nanocellulose/PLA interfaces, respectively. The water vapor transmission rate for nanocellulose + PLA coatings remained lower than that of the control PLA coating, even at a high relative humidity of 90% (38 °C). The multilayer coating had 98% lower oxygen transmission rate compared to just the PLA-coated baseboard, and the heptane vapor transmission rate reduced by 99% in comparison to the baseboard. The grease barrier for nanocellulose + PLA coatings increased 5-fold compared to nanocellulose alone and 2-fold compared to PLA alone. This approach of processing nanocellulose and PLA into multiple layers utilizing slot-die and extrusion coating in tandem has the potential to produce a barrier packaging paper that is both 100% biobased and biodegradable.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2019 Tipo de documento: Article