Swelling and Dissolution of Cellulose Part 1: Free Floating Cotton and Wood Fibres in N‐Methylmorpholine‐N‐oxide–Water Mixtures
- 1 December 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Macromolecular Symposia
- Vol. 244 (1) , 1-18
- https://doi.org/10.1002/masy.200651201
Abstract
Summary: Five modes describing the behaviour of cellulose fibres dipped in a chemical have been identified: Mode 1: Fast dissolution by disintegration into fragments Mode 2: Large swelling by ballooning, and dissolution Mode 3: Large swelling by ballooning, and no dissolution Mode 4: Homogeneous swelling, and no dissolution Mode 5: No swelling and no dissolution In the case of the behaviour of wood and cotton cellulose fibres in N‐methylmorpholine‐N‐oxide (NMMO) and water mixtures, four domains of water content have been identified. Below 17% of water up to monohydrate (13%), the fibres are disintegrated into rod‐like fragments and dissolve (mode 1). In NMMO – water mixtures containing 19–24% water, the cellulose fibres exhibit a heterogeneous swelling by forming balloons (composed of dissolved cellulose holds inside a membrane) separated with non‐swollen sections. The whole fibre will completely dissolve (mode 2) in four successive steps (growth of the balloons, burst of the balloons, dissolution of the non‐swollen sections and finally dissolution of the membrane). With still greater water contents (25–30%), only the ballooning phenomenon is observed, with a partial dissolution inside the balloon (mode 3). Above 35% of water, the fibres swell homogeneously and are not dissolving (mode 4).Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- A review of polymer dissolutionProgress in Polymer Science, 2003
- Structure formation of regenerated cellulose materials from NMMO-solutionsProgress in Polymer Science, 2001
- Structural changes of cellulose dissolved in molten salt hydratesMacromolecular Chemistry and Physics, 2000
- Rheological behavior of cellulose/monohydrate of n-methylmorpholine n-oxide solutions Part 1: Liquid stateRheologica Acta, 1998
- Rotation of a natural cellulosic fibre about its fibre axis due to absorption of moisturePolymer, 1996
- Liquid Crystal DispersionsPublished by World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd ,1995
- Etude thermique de la N-methylmorpholine N-oxyde et de sa complexation avec l'eauJournal of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, 1981
- 30—THE SWELLING OF JUTE FIBRE IN WATER (TRANSVERSE SWELLING)Journal of the Textile Institute Transactions, 1952