4.6 Article

Facile Post-Carboxymethylation of Cellulose Nanofiber Surfaces for Enhanced Water Dispersibility

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 49, Pages 34107-34114

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c05603

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [JP19H02549, JP21K05175]

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Optimizing the carboxymethylation of nanofibrillated bacterial cellulose surfaces with chloroacetic acid successfully improved water dispersibility without changing the inner structure. Surface modification increased fiber width and negatively charged the nanofibers, resulting in improved dispersibility through electrostatic repulsion. This method provides a general approach for enhancing water dispersibility of cellulose nanofibers.
To improve the water dispersibility of cellulose nanofibers without deteriorating the physical properties, it is necessary to develop methods that can selectively modify fiber surfaces. Herein, the reaction conditions for carboxymethylation of the surface of nanofibrillated bacterial cellulose were optimized using chloroacetic acid as an etherification agent. Carboxymethylation in a high-concentration alkaline solution (>5 wt %) in the presence of isopropanol caused the mercerization and carboxymethylation of not only the nanofiber surface but also the cellulose crystals within the nanofiber, resulting in nanofiber swelling and an increase in fiber width. In contrast, with a dilute alkaline aqueous solution (3 wt %), the nanofiber surface was successfully carboxymethylated without changing the inner structure. Furthermore, the morphology was not affected by the carboxymethylation reaction, and no fiber swelling occurred under these reaction conditions. When the substitution reaction proceeded only on the nanofiber surface, the maximum degree of substitution (i.e., the average number of carboxymethyl groups substituted per anhydroglucose residue in cellulose) was 0.091. After surface modification, the nanofibers became more negatively charged, which improved the dispersibility in water through electrostatic repulsion, resulting in a drastic increase in the transparency of the nanofiber dispersion. This method provides a general approach for the surface modification of cellulose nanofibers to increase water dispersibility.

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