1 research outputs found
Amphiphilic Cellulose Nanocrystals from Acid-Free Oxidative Treatment: Physicochemical Characteristics and Use as an Oil–Water Stabilizer
A chemical
pretreatment for producing cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs)
with periodate oxidation and reductive amination is reported. This
new functionalization of cellulose fibers dispenses an alternative
method for fabricating individual CNCs without the widely used acid
hydrolysis process. CNCs can be directly modified during the pretreatment
step, and no additional post-treatments are required to tune the surface
properties. Three butylamine isomers were tested to fabricate CNCs
with amphiphilic features. After mechanical homogenization, CNCs occurred
as individual crystallinities without aggregation where high uniformity
in terms of shape and size was obtained. The elemental analysis and 1H NMR measurement show that iso- and n-butylamine attach the highest number of butylamino groups
to the cellulose fibers. Linking the alkyl groups increases the hydrophobic
nature of the CNCs, where water contact angles from self-standing
films up to 110.5° are reported. Since these butylamino-functionalized
CNCs have hydrophobic characteristics in addition to the hydrophilic
backbone of cellulose, the stabilization impact on oil/water emulsions
is demonstrated as a potential application
