Literature DB >> 21366288

Conceptual approach to renewable barrier film design based on wood hydrolysate.

Y Z Zhu Ryberg1, U Edlund, A-C Albertsson.   

Abstract

Biomass is converted to oxygen barriers through a conceptually unconventional approach involving the preservation of the biomass native interactions and macromolecular components and enhancing the effect by created interactions with a co-component. A combined calculation/assessment model is elaborated to understand, quantify, and predict which compositions that provide an intermolecular affinity high enough to mediate the molecular packing needed to create a functioning barrier. The biomass used is a wood hydrolysate, a polysaccharide-rich but not highly refined mixture where a fair amount of the native intermolecular and intramolecular hemicelluloses-lignin interactions are purposely preserved, resulting in barriers with very low oxygen permeabilities (OP) both at 50 and 80% relative humidity and considerably lower OPs than coatings based on the corresponding highly purified spruce hemicellulose, O-acetyl galactoglucomannan (AcGGM). The component interactions and mutual affinities effectively mediate an immobilization of the chain segments in a dense disordered structure, modeled through the Hansen's solubility parameter concept and quantified on the nanolength scale by positron annihilation lifetime spectrum (PALS).

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21366288     DOI: 10.1021/bm200128s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomacromolecules        ISSN: 1525-7797            Impact factor:   6.988


  1 in total

1.  Facile synthesis of high strength hot-water wood extract films with oxygen-barrier performance.

Authors:  Ge-Gu Chen; Gen-Que Fu; Xiao-Jun Wang; Xiao-Dong Gong; Ya-Shuai Niu; Feng Peng; Chun-Li Yao; Run-Cang Sun
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-01-23       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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