Journal of Textile Research ›› 2024, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (05): 10-18.doi: 10.13475/j.fzxb.20221108101

• Fiber Materials • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Rheological behavior of cotton pulp cellulose/protic ionic liquid solutions

MA Kai1, DENG Lulu2, WANG Xuelin1, SHI Guomin1, ZOU Guanglong1()   

  1. 1. School of Chemical Engineering, Guizhou Minzu University, Guiyang, Guizhou 550025, China
    2. School of Engineering, Westlake University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang 310024, China
  • Received:2022-11-29 Revised:2023-05-31 Online:2024-05-15 Published:2024-05-31

Abstract:

Objective Cellulose is one of the most abundant renewable natural polymers but cannot be effectively dissolved by traditional solvents owing to its highly ordered hydrogen-bond network structure and high crystallinity, which limits the further development and large-scale application of cellulose. Ionic liquids with special structures, due to their strong hydrogen-bond breaking ability, are widely used as a green and efficient solvent for natural polymer dissolution and processing. However, few studies are conducted on protic ionic liquid ([DBNH][Lev]) concerning the dissolution of cellulose and their solution properties. What's more levulinic acid derived from biomass resources endows green properties to [DBNH][Lev].

Method Protic ionic liquid was used as solvent to achieve the efficient dissolution of cotton cellulose under mild conditions. The dissolution mechanism of cellulose in ionic liquid and the steady and dynamic rheological behavior of cellulose solution were systematically studied by using nuclear magnetic resonance and rheological techniques respectively. The influence of factors such as cellulose concentration, shear rate, and temperature on the rheological behavior of cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solution was thoroughly investigated. The morphology and mechanical properties of generated films from cellulose/PILs solution were studied in view of their potential application.

Results The rheological properties of cellulose are closely related to solvent category, cellulose concentration, cellulose molecular weight and experimental temperature. Firstly, it was identified that [DBNH][Lev] presented satisfactory dissolution ability to cellulose and had good solubility up to 5% to cellulose at 100 ℃. The ketone group in the Lev anion may provide a new hydrogen-bonding acceptor and donor in [DBNH][Lev] due to the keto-enol tautomerism, thus strengthening the interaction via hydrogen bonds between cellulose and [DBNH][Lev]. The steady-state rheological curves of cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solutions with different mass concentrations at 25 ℃. For all case, a shear-thinning behavior is observed with increases in the shear rate and shear-thinning behavior becomes more remarkable when cellulose increases. Newtonian plateau phenomenon is observed when all samples were sheared at low shear rate. At the same shear rate, the apparent viscosity of cellulose solution gradually decreases with increasing temperature, which is consistent with classical polymer solutions. The power law coefficient n increases with the increasing concentration from 1.01 to 2.53 at 25 ℃. The turnover concentration from dilute to the semi-dilute unentangled regime defined as the overlap concentration (C*) was 0.83%. The viscosity-temperature dependence of solution was characterized by using the Arrhenius equation, the dissolution activation energy increases when cellulose increases. The cross-over point (gelation point) resulted in a shift to lower frequency when cellulose concentration increases at 25 ℃. It is found that both G' and G″ shift to higher frequency when the temperature decreases because more cellulose chains entangle together in low temperature at C-4 cellulose solution. Finally, it is also found that the generated films have satisfactory mechanical properties, indicating their practical application potential. The generation film at C-5 cellulose solution has the maximum tensile strength of 88.21 MPa and the elongation at breakup to 7.72%.

Conclusion A green and low-cost biomass derived protic ionic liquid was applied to successfully enhance its ability to break cellulose hydrogen bonds and achieve effective dissolution in this research. It has been demonstrated that the keto-enol tautomerism in the levulinic acid anion participates in the hydrogen-bond interaction in the cellulose dissolution process. The trend of shear rate and apparent viscosity of cellulose solutions under different mass concentration conditions is consistent, showing the characteristics of pseudoplastic fluid shear thinning. The apparent viscosity of cellulose is related to cellulose concentration and temperature; The overlap concentration for transition from diluted to semi diluted state is 0.83%, and the empirical Cox-Merz rule is not applicable to cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solutions due to the apparent viscosity curve cannot overlap well with the complex viscosity curve. Therefore, the obtained results in this research provide a basic insight into the rheological response of cellulose in ionic liquid environment, and provide guidance for the processing of cellulose (such as coating and spinning).

Key words: cotton pulp cellulose, protic ionic liquid, dissolution, rheological behavior, Cox-Merz rule, viscoelasticity

CLC Number: 

  • O633.4

Fig.1

1H-NMR spectra of ionic liquids synthesis and its raw materials. (a) Levulinic acid; (b) DBN; (c) [DBNH][Lev]"

Fig.2

Potential hydrogen bond interactions schematic in cellulose solution and regenerated membranes (a) and 13C-NMR spectra of cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solution (b)"

Fig.3

Steady-state rheological curves of cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solution with different mass fractions at 25 ℃"

Fig.4

Steady state rheological curves of C-4 cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solution at different temperatures"

Fig.5

Dependence of zero shear viscosity on mass concentration for cellulose/[DBNH][Lev]solution at 25 ℃"

Fig.6

lnη0-1/T fitting curves of cellulose/[DBNH] [Lev] solutions with different mass fractions"

Tab.1

Dissolution activation energy of cellulose/[DBNH] [Lev] solutions"

样品编号 Eη/(kJ·mol-1) 线性相关系数R2
C-1 45.937 5 0.989 1
C-2 61.622 6 0.985 2
C-3 67.509 1 0.992 7
C-4 74.248 0 0.994 9
C-5 80.388 6 0.983 3

Fig.7

Relationship between storage modulus, loss modulus and angular frequency of cellulose/[DBNH] [Lev] solutions with different mass fractions at 25 ℃"

Fig.8

Relationship between storage modulus, loss modulus and angular frequency of C-4 cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solutions at different temperatures"

Fig.9

Cox-Merz diagram of cellulose/[DBNH][Lev] solutions with different mass fractions at 25 ℃. (a) Relationship between steady shearing viscosity and shearing rate; (b) Relationship between dynamic complex viscosity and angular frequency"

Fig.10

SEM image of C-4 regenerated cellulose film (a) and stress-strain curves of C-3、C-4 and C-5 regenerated cellulose film (b)"

[1] CHENG Q Z, WANG S Q, RIALS T G, et al. Poly(vinyl alcohol) nanocomposites reinforced with cellulose fibrils isolated by high intensity ultrasonication[J]. Composites Part A:Applied Science and Manufacturing, 2009, 40(2): 218-224.
[2] VROMAN I, TIGHZERT L. Biodegradable polymers[J]. Materials, 2009, 2(2): 307-344.
[3] ANDANSON J M, BORDES E, DEVEMY J, et al. Understanding the role of co-solvents in the dissolution of cellulose in ionic liquids[J]. Green Chemistry, 2014, 16(5): 2528-2538.
[4] LI D, HUANG X Y, HUANG Y A, et al. Additive printed all-cellulose membranes with hierarchical structure for highly efficient separation of oil/water nanoemulsions[J]. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 2019, 11(47): 44375-44382.
[5] WANG G, HE Y, WANG H, et al. A cellulose sponge with robust superhydrophilicity and under-water superoleophobicity for highly effective oil/water separation[J]. Green Chemistry, 2015, 17(5): 3093-3099.
[6] THAKUR V K, VOICU S I. Recent advances in cellulose and chitosan based membranes for water purification: a concise review[J]. Carbohydrate Polymers. 2016, 146(1): 148-165.
[7] KO Y, KWON M, BAE W K, et al. Flexible supercapacitor electrodes based on real metal-like cellulose papers[J]. Nature Communications, 2017, 8(14): 1-11.
[8] RUHS P A, MALOLLARI K G, BINELLI M R, et al. Conformal bacterial cellulose coatings as lubricious surfaces[J]. ACS Nano, 2020, 14 (4): 3885-3895.
doi: 10.1021/acsnano.9b09956 pmid: 32150387
[9] HULT E L, IOTTI M, LENES M. Efficient approach to high barrier packaging using microfibrillar cellulose and shellac[J]. Cellulose, 2010, 17 (3):575-586.
[10] TAKAYASHI M, DAISUKE T, NOBUTAKE T, et al. Solution properties of celluloses from different biological origins in LiCl-DMAc[J]. Cellulose, 2001, 8(4): 275-282.
[11] FINK H P, WEIGEL P, PURZ H J, et al. Structure formation of regenerated cellulose materials from NMMO-solutions[J]. Progress in Polymer Science, 2001, 26(9): 1473-1524.
[12] NAUSHAD M, ALOTHMAN Z A, KHAN A B, et al. Effect of ionic liquid on activity, stability, and structure of enzymes: a review[J]. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, 2012, 51(4): 555-560.
doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2012.06.020 pmid: 22732130
[13] VASCONCELOS A, FREDDI G, CAVACO-PAULO A. Biodegradable materials based on silk fibroin and keratin[J]. Biomacromolecules, 2008, 9(4): 1299-1305.
doi: 10.1021/bm7012789 pmid: 18355027
[14] SUN N, RAHMAN M, QIN Y, et al. Complete dissolution and partial delignification of wood in the ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate[J]. Green Chemistry, 2009, 11(5): 646-655.
[15] SWATLOSKI R P, SPEAR S K, ROGERS R D, et al. Dissolution of cellose with lonic liquids[J]. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2002, 124(18): 4974-4975.
[16] DISSANAYAKE N, THALANGAMAARACHCHIGE V D, THAKURATHI M, et al. Dissolution of cotton cellulose in 1:1 mixtures of 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium methylphosphonate and 1-alkylimidazole co-solvents[J]. Carbohydrate Polymer, 2019, 221(1): 63-72.
[17] BRANDT-TALBOT A, GSCHWEND F J V, FENNELL P S, et al. An economically viable ionic liquid for the fractionation of lignocellulosic biomass[J]. Green Chemistry, 2017, 19(13): 3078-3102.
[18] GSCHWEND F J V, MALARET F, SHINDE S, et al. Rapid pretreatment of miscanthus using the low-cost ionic liquid triethylammonium hydrogen sulfate at elevated temperatures[J]. Green Chemistry, 2018, 20(15): 3486-3498.
[19] MACFARLANE D R, SEDDON K R. Lonic liquids-progress on the fundamental issues[J]. Australian Journal of Chemistry, 2007, 60(1): 3-5.
[20] GREAVES T L, WEERAWARDENA A, KRODKIEWSKA I, et al. Protic ionic liquids: physicochemical properties and behavior as amphiphile self-assembly solvents[J]. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2008, 112(3): 896-905.
[21] KING A W T, ASIKKALA J, MUTIKAINEN I, et al. Distillable acid-base conjugate ionic liquids for cellulose dissolution and processing[J]. Angewandte Chemie-International Edition, 2011, 50(28): 6301-6305.
[22] ACHINIVU E C, HOWARD R M, Li G Q, et al. Lignin extraction from biomass with protic ionic liquids[J]. Green Chemistry, 2014, 16(3): 1114-1119.
[23] BYRNE N, ANGELL C A. Formation and dissolution of hen egg white lysozyme amyloid fibrils in protic ionic liquids[J]. Chemical Communications, 2009, 9(9): 1046-1048.
[24] LEE S Y, OGAWA A, WATANABE M, et al. Nonhumidified intermediate temperature fuel cells using protic ionic liquids[J]. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2010, 132(28): 9764-9773.
[25] DENG L L, YUE W, XIE H B, et al. Biobased protic ionic liquids as sustainable solvents for wool keratin/cellulose simultaneous dissolution: solution properties and composited membrane preparation[J]. ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering 2022, 10(6): 2158-2168.
[26] BECHERINI S, MEZZETTA A, GUAZZELLI L, et al. Levulinate amidinium protic ionic liquids (PILs) as suitable media for the dissolution and levulination of cellulose[J]. New Journal of Chemistry, 2019, 43(11):4554-4561.
[27] SESCOUSSE R, LE K A, BUDTOVA T, et al. Viscosity of cellulose-imidazolium-based ionic liquid solu-tions[J]. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2010, 114 (21): 7222-7228.
[28] 于勤, 张丽, 曹建华, 等. 二醋酸纤维素纤维纺丝溶液流变性能[J]. 纺织学报, 2013, 34(6):8-12.
YU Qin, ZHANG Li, CAO Jianhua, et al. Rheological property of cellulose diacetate spinning dope[J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2013, 34(6): 8-12.
[29] 闫红芹. 纤维素/离子液体溶液流变行为的研究[J]. 纺织学报, 2009, 30(12):9-12.
YAN Hongqin. Study on rheological property of cellulose/ionic liquids[J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2009, 30(12): 9-12.
[30] 宋俊, 谭晓瑞, 程博闻, 等. [AMIM]Cl为溶剂的纤维素溶液的流变性能[J]. 纺织学报, 2010, 31(11):11-15.
SONG Jun, TAN Xiaorui, CHENG Bowen, et al. Rheological behavior of cellulose solution with [AMIM]Cl as solvent[J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2010, 31(11): 11-15.
[31] WANG M, ZHAO T, WANG G H, et al. Blend films of human hair and cellulose prepared from an ionic liquid[J]. Textile Research Journal, 2014, 84 (12): 1315-1324.
[32] 李根, 刘跃军, 谭海英, 等. 微晶纤维素/聚丁二酸丁二醇酯复合材料的流变行为[J]. 复合材料学报, 2017, 34 (1):210-216.
LI Gen, LIU Yuejun, TAN Haiying, et al. Rheological behavior of microcrystalline cellulose/poly (butylene succinate) composites[J]. Acta Materiae Compositae Sinica, 2017, 34(1): 210-216.
[33] ZHANG J P, GOTOH Y, POTTHAST A, et al. High performance cellulose fibers regenerated from 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride solution: effects of viscosity and molecular weight[J]. Journal of Applied Polymer Science, 2019, 137(19): 48684-48688.
[34] LU F, WANG L J, ZHANG C, et al. Influence of temperature on the solution rheology of cellulose in 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride/dimethyl sul-foxide[J]. Cellulose, 2015, 22(5): 3077-3087.
[35] SONG J, CAO H, LIU F, et al. Effect of lithium chloride on cellulose/1-allyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride solutions[J]. Rheological Acta, 2016, 55(5): 423-430.
[36] CHAE D W, KIM B C, LEE W S. Rheological characterization of cellulose solutions in N-methyl morpholine N-oxide monohydrate[J]. Journal of Applied Polymer Science, 2002, 86(1): 216-222.
[1] BU Fan, YING Lili, LI Changlong, WANG Zongqian. Dissolution behavior and mechanism of down in lactic acid/cysteine deep eutectic solvent [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2023, 44(10): 24-30.
[2] XING Jian, ZHANG Shucheng, YU Tianjiao, TANG Wenbin, WANG Liang, XU Zhenzhen, LIANG Botao. Research progress in recycling of waste polyphenylene sulfide fibers [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2023, 44(04): 222-229.
[3] QIU Zhicheng, LI Xin, LI Zhiyong, WANG Ying, JIN Jian, WU Shufang. Structure and properties of polyester/carbon black system prepared by in-situ continuous polymerization [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2021, 42(10): 15-21.
[4] GUO Zengge, JIANG Zhaohui, JIA Zhao, PU Congcong, LI Xin, CHENG Bowen. Influence of pressure on rheological behavior of polyethylene terephthalate-polyamide 6 copolymer/polyamide 6 blends [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2019, 40(12): 27-31.
[5] WANG Hongcheng, LANG Runnan, WANG Fangfang, XU Fengyu, SHEN Jingjin. Prediction model and analysis of foot-ground reaction force based on pressure insole [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2019, 40(11): 175-181.
[6] . Dissolution behavior and mechanism of hydroxyethyl cellulose with low molar substitution in alkali solvent [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2018, 39(10): 22-27.
[7] . Solubility and spectral characteristic of feather and down in different dissolution systems [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2017, 38(04): 27-31.
[8] . Ultrasonic assisted cotton/polyester blended fibers quantitative analysis [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2016, 37(06): 27-31.
[9] . Rheological behavior of dyeable polyester melt [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2015, 36(07): 1-6.
[10] . Effects of hydrostatic pressure on rheological behavior of PET with different intrinsic viscosity [J]. Journal of Textile Research, 2015, 36(06): 13-17.
[11] . Recycling of waste cotton fabrics by ionic liquid dissolution processing [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2015, 36(05): 23-28.
[12] . Research progress in cellulose fiber preparation with alkali/urea aqueous solution at low temperature [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2014, 35(2): 121-0.
[13] . Rheology and wettability of chitosan /hydroxypropyl cellulose blend materials [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2013, 34(5): 25-29.
[14] YU QIN.  Dynamic viscoelasticity of cellulose diacetate fiber spinning solution [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2013, 34(3): 5-8.
[15] RONG Zhen, CHEN Yun, TANG Shi-Jun. Components separation of wastes polyester-cotton blended textile with ionic liquid dessolving method [J]. JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH, 2012, 33(8): 24-29.
Viewed
Full text


Abstract

Cited

  Shared   
  Discussed   
No Suggested Reading articles found!