Preparation of cellulose nanospheres via combining ZnCl2·3H2O pretreatment and p-toluenesulfonic hydrolysis as a two-step method.

2021 
Spherical nanocelluloses, also known as cellulose nanospheres (CNS), have controllable morphology and have shown advantages as green template material, emulsion stabilizer. Herein, CNS were prepared via a new two-step method, first pretreatment of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) using ZnCl2·3H2O and then acid hydrolysis of regenerated cellulose (RC) via p-toluenesulfonic acid (p-TsOH). The shape, size, crystallinity of MCC were changed, and nubbly RC with smallest size (942 nm) was obtained after 2 h pretreatment by ZnCl2·3H2O. CNS with high 61.3% yield were produced after acid hydrolysis (67 wt% p-TsOH) of RC at 80 °C, 6 h. The analysis of Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS), Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) showed that CNS had an average diameter of 347 nm. CNS were present in precipitate after high-speed centrifugation, due to the high Zeta potential of -12 mV and large size. The structure of CNS was tested by Fourier Transfer Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray Diffraction (XRD), Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR), CNS had high crystallinity (cellulose II) of 61%. Thermal Gravimetric Analysis (TGA) indicated that CNS had high thermal stability (Tonset 303.3 °C, Tmax 332 °C). CNS showed poor re-dispersibility in water/ethanol/THF, 1 wt% CNS could be dissolved in ZnCl2·3H2O. 7.37% rod-like CNC were obtained after 6 h hydrolysis. FTIR proved that p-TsOH was recovered by re-crystallization. This study provided a novel, sustainable two-step method for the preparation of spherical CNS.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    45
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []