9 research outputs found

    Direct enzymatic esterification of cotton and Avicel with wild-type and engineered cutinases

    Get PDF
    In this work, the surface of cellulose, either Avicel or cotton fabric, was modified using cutinases without any previous treatment to swell or to solubilise the polymer. Aiming further improvement of cutinase ester synthase activity on cellulose, an engineered cutinase was investigated. Wild-type cutinase from Fusarium solani and its fusion with the carbohydrate-binding module N1 from Cellulomonas fimi were able to esterify the hydroxyl groups of cellulose with distinct efficiencies depending on the acid substrate/solvent system used, as shown by titration and by ATR-FTIR. The carbonyl stretching peak area increased significantly after enzymatic treatment during 72 h at 30 °C. Cutinase treatment resulted in relative increases of 31 and 9 % when octanoic acid and vegetable oil were used as substrates, respectively. Cutinase-N1 treatment resulted in relative increases of 11 and 29 % in the peak area when octanoic acid and vegetable oil were used as substrates, respectively. The production and application of cutinase fused with the domain N1 as a cellulose ester synthase, here reported for the first time, is therefore an interesting strategy to pursuit.This work was co-funded by the European Social Fund through the management authority POPH and FCT, Postdoctoral fellowship reference: SFRH/BPD/47555/2008. The authors also want to thank Doctor Raul Machado for his valuable help on FTIR spectral data treatment

    Thermal stability of surface-esterified cellulose and its composite with polyolefinic matrix

    No full text
    Thermal stability of hydrophobized cellulose powders was investigated from the perspective of potential use as filler in non-polar polyolefinic matrix. The hydrophobization was done by heterogeneous esterification with three carboxylic acids which differ in chain length (3, 10 and 18 carbons). Data measured by means of thermogravimetry (TG) were recalculated according to model-free isoconversional method to construct time-temperature plots. It was demonstrated that the esterification significantly decreases thermal stability of the material, which reduces feasible processing window. Under non-oxidative atmosphere, the single-step decomposition of materials is prevailing, while the process is more complex in air. In both cases the oleic acid esters showed the lowest stability and the original cellulose was the most stable. Finally, all powders were compounded with polyethylene or polypropylene. Obtained composites were then subjected to color measurement and TG. Even though the materials were partly degraded, which was indicated by the yellowish hue of the composites, virtually no impact of the filler pyrolysis on the polymer matrix decomposition was observed, particularly in case of decanoyl esters. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

    Solvent impact on esterification and film formation ability of nanofibrillated cellulose

    No full text
    In this study we have manufactured nanofibrillar cellulose and modified the fibre surface with ester groups in order to hydrophobise the surface. Nanofibrillated cellulose was chosen to demonstrate the phenomena, since due to its high surface area the effects at issue are pronounced. The prepared NFC ester derivatives were butyrate, hexanoate, benzoate, naphtoate, diphenyl acetate, stearate and palmitate. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, solid state NMR and contact angle measurements were used to demonstrate the chemical changes taking place on the cellulose surface. NFC ester derivatives can be prepared after a careful solvent exchange to a water-free solvent medium has been carried out. Butyl and palmitoyl esters were chosen for film forming tests due to the difference in their carbon chain lengths, and their contact angles and water vapour and oxygen permeation rates were studied. The prepared nanocellulose esters show increased hydrophobicity even at very low levels of substitution and readily form films when the films are prepared from acetone dispersions. The permeation rates suggest a potential use as barrier materials
    corecore