| Literature DB >> 28275533 |
Puttaswamy Manjula1, Govindan Srinikethan1, K Vidya Shetty1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biodiesel production using Pongamia pinnata (P. pinnata) seeds results in large amount of unused seed hull. These seed hulls serve as a potential source for cellulose fibres which can be exploited as reinforcement in composites.Entities:
Keywords: Cellulose microfibres; Chlorination; Hemicellulose; Lignin; Pongamia pinnata seed hull
Year: 2017 PMID: 28275533 PMCID: PMC5320004 DOI: 10.1186/s40643-017-0144-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioresour Bioprocess ISSN: 2197-4365
Fig. 1Scanning electron microscope images a dewaxed Pongamia pinnata seed hull, b sodium chlorite-treated fibres and c isolated cellulose fibres
Particle size distribution values of isolated cellulose fibre
| Peak No. | S.P. area ratioa | Mean (nm) | SDb (nm) | Mode (nm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.20 | 58.4 | 3.3 | 58.9 |
| 2 | 0.80 | 536.3 | 44.1 | 535.0 |
| Total | 1.00 | 441.9 | 194.3 | 535.00 |
aSpecific particle surface area ratio
bStandard deviation
Fig. 2DLS analysis spectra of isolated cellulose fibres
Fig. 3FTIR spectra of a Pongamia pinnata seed hull fibres, b isolated cellulose fibres
Fig. 4The 13C NMR spectra of a untreated Pongamia pinnata seed hull fibres, b isolated cellulose fibres
Fig. 5Thermogram of untreated Pongamia pinnata seed hull fibres and isolated cellulose fibres
Fig. 6X-ray diffraction patterns of untreated Pongamia pinnata seed hull and isolated cellulose fibres
Comparison of fibre size and crystallinity index (CI) of cellulose fibre isolated from different sources and isolation treatments
| S. no | Source | Size (diameter) of cellulose fibres as observed under SEM | Crystallinity index (CI) isolated cellulose fibre (%) | Increase in crystallinity (%) | Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Resak’s hardwood waste | 7–12 (μm) | 68.1 | 37.33 | Alkaline and acid hydrolysis | (Abidin et al. |
| 2 | Corn husk | 5–8 (nm) | 63.3 | 46.5 | Alkaline, TEMPO oxidation, and homogenization | (Du et al. |
| 3 | Arecanut husk fibre | 3–5 (nm) | 73 | 97 | Alkaline, acid hydrolysis, Bleaching (Chlorination), homogenization | (Julie et al. |
| 4 | Moso bamboo culms | 0.5–1 (μm) | 65.32 | 28.87 | Microwave liquefaction, bleaching (Chlorination), Alkaline, homogenization and ultrasonication | (Xie et al. |
| 5 |
| 5.29–10.94 (nm) | 65.32 | 36.33 | Acid hydrolysis, homogenization, sonication | (Saurabh et al. |
| 6 | Sugarcane bagasse | <20 (μm) | – | – | Steam explosion, enzymatic treatment | (Saelee et al. |
| 7 | Mengkuang leaves | 5–80 (μm) | 69.5 | 26.13 | Alkaline Bleaching (Chlorination), sonication | (Sheltami et al. |
| 8 | Rice husk | 7 (μm) | 59 | 26.06 | Alkali, bleaching | (Johar et al. |
| 9 | Coconut palm leaf sheath | 10–15 (μm) | 47.7 | 12.7 | Chlorination and alkaline | (Maheswari et al. |
| 10 |
| 6–8 (μm) | 47 | 72.79 | Chlorination and alkaline | Present work |