Issue 15, 2010

The impact of esterification reactions on physical properties of cellulose thin films

Abstract

Carboxylic acid groups introduced in cellulose by various oxidative pre-treatments (purification, dissolution) can massively influence materials' properties motivating research on counteracting conversion schemes. We used cellulose thin films to unravel the patterns of different intra- and intermolecular esterification reactions. The impact of the formation of ester bonds on the charging and swelling was studied by streaming potential/streaming current measurements and in situ ellipsometry. Methylation was found to result in a slightly reduced swelling and ion conductivity of the cellulose layers. Self-esterification reactions caused higher degrees of conversion of the carboxylic acid functionalities producing a dramatically altered swelling and ion conductivity pattern. “Carbodiimide-activated” induced self-esterification was found to be more efficient than any thermally induced conversion. Together, our study quantitatively shows the potential of self-esterification protocols for the modulation of performance-related characteristics of cellulose materials.

Graphical abstract: The impact of esterification reactions on physical properties of cellulose thin films

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Feb 2010
Accepted
17 May 2010
First published
14 Jun 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 3680-3684

The impact of esterification reactions on physical properties of cellulose thin films

Y. Müller, I. Tot, A. Potthast, T. Rosenau, R. Zimmermann, K. Eichhorn, C. Nitschke, G. Scherr, U. Freudenberg and C. Werner, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 3680 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00005A

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