8 research outputs found
Cellulose micro and nanofibrils as coating agent for improved printability in office papers
The use of nanocelluloses is being conducted
for the most diverse applications. Their
performance as coating agent has been mainly
explored to improve barrier properties, as they emerge
as perfect candidate for plastic substitution, but it is
also important to explore their potential to improve
printing quality. In the present work, the influence of
different nanocelluloses, obtained through mechanical,
enzymatic, TEMPO-mediated oxidation and carboxymethylation
treatments, in the coating process
and inkjet printability of office papers was assessed.
The results revealed that the cellulose nanofibrils are
better for printability than the microfibrils. But the size
and charge of the former must be taken into account,
since fibrils of very small size penetrate the paper structure, dragging the pigments from the surface, and
very anionic nanofibrils can also have negative
influence on the optical density. Besides, an interesting
synergy between surface-sizing starch and the
cellulose nanofibrils was found to occur as the latter
closed the paper structure, which prevented starch
from penetrating, while potentiating both of their
positive effects on ink pigment entrapment. An
additional study of characterization of inkjet pigments
was also performed