4.7 Article

Pure Chitosan Biomedical Textile Fibers from Mixtures of Low- and High-Molecular Weight Bidisperse Polymer Solutions: Processing and Understanding of Microstructure-Mechanical Properties' Relationship

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094767

Keywords

chitosan; fiber spinning; crystallinity; short polymer chains; polysaccharide X-ray scattering; textile applications

Funding

  1. Emmy Noether Programm of the German Research Foundation DFG [OS 497/6-1]
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR) under the Investissement d'Avenir program [ANR-11-EQPX-0010]
  3. Baden-Wuerttemberg Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts (MWK)
  4. University of Freiburg

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This study investigated the effects of low molar mass chitosan on chitosan fibers with bimodal distributions of molar masses. The results showed that adding low molar mass chitosan slightly increased the crystallinity of chitosan films, but decreased the crystallinity and altered the mechanical properties of stretched fibers.
Natural polymers, as extracted from biomass, may exhibit large macromolecular polydispersity. We investigated the impact of low molar mass chitosan (LMW, DPw similar to 115) on the properties of chitosan fibers obtained by wet spinning of chitosan solutions with bimodal distributions of molar masses. The fiber crystallinity index (CrI) was assessed by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and the mechanical properties were obtained by uniaxial tensile tests. The LMW chitosan showed to slightly increase the crystallinity index in films which were initially processed from the bimodal molar mass chitosan solutions, as a result of increased molecular mobility and possible crystal nucleating effects. Nevertheless, the CrI remained almost constant or slightly decreased in stretched fibers at increasing content of LMW chitosan in the bidisperse chitosan collodion. The ultimate mechanical properties of fibers were altered by the addition of LMW chitosan as a result of a decrease of entanglement density and chain orientation in the solid state. An increase of crystallinity might not be expected from LMW chitosan with a still relatively high degree of polymerization (DPw >= 115). Instead, different nucleation agents-either smaller molecules or nanoparticles-should be used to improve the mechanical properties of chitosan fibers for textile applications.

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