Agriculture crop residues as a source for the production of nanofibrillated cellulose with low energy demand
2014
Chaker, Ashraf | Mutjé, Pere | Vilar, Manuel Rei | Boufi, Sami
Nanofibrillated cellulose (NFC) from three agricultural crop (rice straw, corn and rapeseed stalk) residues was isolated with high-yield production using either high pressure homogenisation or a high speed blender. The fibres were extracted from the neat biomass via an NaClO₂/acetic acid and alkali pulping process. TEMPO-mediated oxidation pretreatment at pH 7 and 10 was accomplished to facilitate the release of the cellulose microfibrils. The fibrillation yield, transparency degree and morphological characteristics of the ensuing NFC were analysed using the centrifugation method, transmittance measurement and SEM observation. The energy consumption during the disintegration process was also accessed. It was shown that the mode of lignin removal and the fibre pretreatment notably affected the nanofibrillation efficiency and energy demand. A successful production of NFC with yield exceeding 90 %, using a simple Waring blender, was achieved when the NaClO₂/acetic acid delignification followed by a TEMPO-NaBr–NaClO oxidation at pH 10 was adopted.
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