4.7 Article

Carboxymethyl Bacterial Cellulose from Nata de Coco: Effects of NaOH

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13030348

Keywords

bacterial cellulose; biopolymer; carboxymethyl cellulose; CMC; nata de coco; sodium hydroxide

Funding

  1. Center of Excellence in Materials Science and Technology, Chiang Mai University
  2. Program Management Unit for Human Resources & Institutional Development, Research and Invitation
  3. Faculty of Agro-Industry, CMU [CMU-8392(10)/COE64]
  4. Thailand Research Fund (TRF) Senior Research Scholar [RTA6280001]
  5. Chiang Mai University
  6. NXPO [Frontier Global Partnership for Strengthening Cutting-edge Technology and Innovations in Materials Science, and Faculty of Science [CoE64-P001]

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Carboxymethyl bacterial cellulose (CMCn) was synthesized from bacterial cellulose from nata de coco by carboxymethylation using different NaOH concentrations, with the optimal condition resulting from 30g/100mL NaOH providing the highest DS value. The tensile strength of CMCn films increased with NaOH concentration up to 30g/100mL, but decreased at higher concentrations. The highest elongation at break was obtained from CMCn films synthesized with 50g/100mL NaOH concentration.
Bacterial cellulose from nata de coco was prepared from the fermentation of coconut juice with Acetobacter xylinum for 10 days at room temperature under sterile conditions. Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) was transformed from the bacterial cellulose from the nata de coco by carboxymethylation using different concentrations of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and monochloroacetic acid (MCA) in an isopropyl (IPA) medium. The effects of various NaOH concentrations on the degree of substitution (DS), chemical structure, viscosity, color, crystallinity, morphology and the thermal properties of carboxymethyl bacterial cellulose powder from nata de coco (CMCn) were evaluated. In the carboxymethylation process, the optimal condition resulted from NaOH amount of 30 g/100 mL, as this provided the highest DS value (0.92). The crystallinity of CMCn declined after synthesis but seemed to be the same in each condition. The mechanical properties (tensile strength and percentage of elongation at break), water vapor permeability (WVP) and morphology of CMCn films obtained from CMCn synthesis using different NaOH concentrations were investigated. The tensile strength of CMCn film synthesized with a NaOH concentration of 30 g/100 mL increased, however it declined when the amount of NaOH concentration was too high. This result correlated with the DS value. The highest percent elongation at break was obtained from CMCn films synthesized with 50 g/100 mL NaOH, whereas the elongation at break decreased when NaOH concentration increased to 60 g/100 mL.

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