2 research outputs found
Change in the Crystallite Orientation of Poly(ethylene oxide)/Cellulose Nanofiber Composite Films
The crystallite orientation and crystallographic
domain structure
of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) in cellulose nanofiber-incorporated
(CNF-incorporated) PEO films developed for packaging materials were
observed using wide-angle X-ray diffraction for different CNF filling
ratios. When a CNF filling ratio of <10 wt % was used, the molecular
chains in the PEO crystallite region were oriented in a direction
perpendicular to the surface of the film; however, when the ratio
was >50 wt %, the PEO molecular chains were oriented in a direction
parallel to the surface of the film. The fiber axis of the CNFs became
parallel to the surface of the PEO/CNF composite film when the filling
ratio was >25 wt %. The change in the orientation of the PEO crystals
occurred because increasing the amount of CNF in the composite films
decreased the space in which the PEO could be crystallized. Furthermore,
the hydrogen bonds between the PEO and the CNF may behave as crystallization
nuclei for the PEO. Our results thus pave the way toward the development
of packaging materials that are more impermeable to gases than the
current materials
Change in the Crystallite Orientation of Poly(ethylene oxide)/Cellulose Nanofiber Composite Films
The crystallite orientation and crystallographic
domain structure
of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) in cellulose nanofiber-incorporated
(CNF-incorporated) PEO films developed for packaging materials were
observed using wide-angle X-ray diffraction for different CNF filling
ratios. When a CNF filling ratio of <10 wt % was used, the molecular
chains in the PEO crystallite region were oriented in a direction
perpendicular to the surface of the film; however, when the ratio
was >50 wt %, the PEO molecular chains were oriented in a direction
parallel to the surface of the film. The fiber axis of the CNFs became
parallel to the surface of the PEO/CNF composite film when the filling
ratio was >25 wt %. The change in the orientation of the PEO crystals
occurred because increasing the amount of CNF in the composite films
decreased the space in which the PEO could be crystallized. Furthermore,
the hydrogen bonds between the PEO and the CNF may behave as crystallization
nuclei for the PEO. Our results thus pave the way toward the development
of packaging materials that are more impermeable to gases than the
current materials