| Literature DB >> 33957955 |
J Y Zhu1, Umesh P Agarwal2, Peter N Ciesielski3, Michael E Himmel3, Runan Gao4,5, Yulin Deng4, Maria Morits6, Monika Österberg6.
Abstract
Plant-biomass-based nanomaterials have attracted great interest recently for their potential to replace petroleum-sourced polymeric materials for sustained economic development. However, challenges associated with sustainable production of lignocellulosic nanoscale polymeric materials (NPMs) need to be addressed. Producing materials from lignocellulosic biomass is a value-added proposition compared with fuel-centric approach. This report focuses on recent progress made in understanding NPMs-specifically lignin nanoparticles (LNPs) and cellulosic nanomaterials (CNMs)-and their sustainable production. Special attention is focused on understanding key issues in nano-level deconstruction of cell walls and utilization of key properties of the resultant NPMs to allow flexibility in production to promote sustainability. Specifically, suitable processes for producing LNPs and their potential for scaled-up production, along with the resultant LNP properties and prospective applications, are discussed. In the case of CNMs, terminologies such as cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) used in the literature are examined. The term cellulose nano-whiskers (CNWs) is used here to describe a class of CNMs that has a morphology similar to CNCs but without specifying its crystallinity, because most applications of CNCs do not need its crystalline characteristic. Additionally, progress in enzymatic processing and drying of NPMs is also summarized. Finally, the report provides some perspective of future research that is likely to result in commercialization of plant-based NPMs.Entities:
Keywords: Cell wall deconstruction; Cellulosic nano-whiskers (CNWs); Cellulosic nanomaterials (CNMs); Fibrillation; Lignin nanoparticles (LNPs)
Year: 2021 PMID: 33957955 PMCID: PMC8101122 DOI: 10.1186/s13068-021-01963-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Biofuels ISSN: 1754-6834 Impact factor: 6.040
Fig. 1Schematics of cellulose ultrastructure: a radial aggregation in cell walls (through hydrogen bonding) of cellulose elementary fibrils into nanofibrils and fibril matrices [14] based on Fengel [11] (with permission from TAPPI ©); b longitudinal cellulose aggregation with crystalline and disordered regions based on Rowland and Roberts [17], I:coalesced surface with high order, II: readily accessible slightly disordered surfaces, III: readily accessible surfaces of strain-disorder tilt and twist regions
Fig. 2LNPs preparation methods. a Schematic of solvent shifting method; (A1) AFM height image of LNPs prepared by solvent shifting from Sipponen et al. [55]; (A2) TEM image of a CLP dispersion (scale bar 500 nm) from Lintinen et al. [63]. (A1) and (A2) reproduced by permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry. b Simplified experimental aerosol-flow reactor setup for the synthesis of lignin particles; (B1) SEM micrographs of solid lignin spheres synthesized by aerosol flow of OSL. b and (B1) Reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ago et al. [46]. Copyright © 2016, American Chemical Society. (B2) SEM image of wrinkled lignin particles with scale bars = 200 nm; From Kämäräinen et al. [70], reproduced by permission of The Royal Society of Chemistry. c TEM image of LNPs obtained by the acid precipitation of 0.56%wt Indulin AT in ethylene glycol and further dialysis in milli‐Q water with scale bars = 50 nm, reproduced with permission from Frangville et al. [50] © 2014 WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. d Sonicated wheat straw lignin morphological characterization by TEM, reproduced with permission from Gilca et al. [73] Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. e SEM images of the lignin mechanically sheared for 2 h, reproduced with permission from Nair et al. [74] © 2014 Wiley‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
LNP preparation methods
| Method | Raw lignin | Solvent/antisolvent | Morphology, size | Surface properties | Applications | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solvent shifting (nanoprecipitation, solvent exchange) | KL | Acetone and water/water | Spherical, | Hydrophilic, pH 4.3 ζ pH 3.9 ζ | Nanocomposites Pickering emulsions, drug delivery | [ |
| KL | Spherical, | ζ | Component of biomaterial ink for 3D printing of scaffolds for cell culture | [ | ||
| KL | Spherical, | ζ ζ | Water purification | [ | ||
| KL | Spherical, | pH 4.0 ζ | Model surfaces | [ | ||
| KL | Spherical, | ζ | Biocatalytic particles for SET-LRP, Pickering emulsions | [ | ||
| KL(+ BADGE) | Spherical, core–shell From 71 to 113 nm | ζ from | Covalent surface modification, adhesives | [ | ||
| KL | THF and water/water | Spherical, 177–300 nm | Hydrophilic, smooth, ζ = 33–45 mV at pH 7 | Pickering emulsions, immobilization of biocatalyst, adhesives | [ [ [ | |
| KL | Spherical, | pH 3.9 ζ | Model surfaces | [ | ||
| OSL | Spherical, smooth, aggregated, | Enzyme immobilization, biosensing | [ | |||
| KL | Spherical, 200–500 nm | Hydrophilic smooth, ζ | [ | |||
| Acetylated AL | THF/water | Spherical, 110 nm Spherical | Hydrophilic Hydrophilic | Potential in drug delivery and microencapsulation photo-protection agent | [ [ | |
| Organic acid lignin | 100–600, 600–5000, 400–2000 nm | |||||
| KL | THF and EtOH and water/water | Spherical, 200 nm | Hydrophilic smooth, ζ | Pickering emulsions, polymer composites | [ | |
| Carboxylated KL | THF/water | Spherical, 167 nm | Biomedical applications, drug delivery | [ | ||
| EHL | Acetone and water/water or acetone | Spherical | [ | |||
| AL | EtOH and water/water | Spherical, 50–100 nm, 250–350 nm | Hydrophilic smooth, ζ ca. − 43 mV | Drug delivery | [ | |
| Reverse micelles | AL | Dioxane/cyclohexane | Spherical | Hydrophobic, smooth | Nanocomposites: UV-blocking, optimization of rheological properties | [ |
| Acidification, pH shifting | KL (Indulin AT) | EG/HCl aq | Aggregate-like clusters | Uneven surface | Drug delivery, sorbents for heavy metal ions | [ |
| NaOH aq/HNO3 aq | Aggregate-like clusters | Uneven surface | ||||
| KL | EG/ HNO3 aq | Aggregate-like clusters, 84 nm | uneven surface, ζ | Antimicrobial silver-infused nanoparticles | [ | |
| KL | EG/HNO3 aq | Aggregate-like | uneven surface, partly hydrophilic, | Surface functionalization with, e.g., antimicrobial agents | [ | |
| AL | NaOH aq/H2SO4 aq | Aggregate-like 768.4 ± 97.8 nm, 725.4 ± 51.3 nm | ζ ζ | Emulsification, Pickering emulsion, template for synthesis of polymer capsules | [ | |
| Aerosol flow reactor, dry particles | Hydrothermal treatment | Acetone/none | Spherical | Smooth, hydrophilic, ζ | [ | |
| KL, AL, OSL | DMF/none Water/none | Spherical, 30 nm-2000 nm | Smooth surface, hydrophilic KL ζ OSL ζ | Pickering emulsions | [ [ | |
| KL | DMF/none | Spherical, 50–2000 nm | Smooth | Coatings | [ | |
| Aerosol + freezing | AL | DMSO/water | Spherical particles and capsules, 80–200 nm | Smooth, hydrophilic, negatively charged | UV absorption, drug delivery | [ |
| CO2 precipitation | KL | DMF/CO2 | Coalesced quasi-spherical, | Uneven surface, hydrophilic | UV absorption | [ |
| Mechanical treatment | ||||||
| Sonication | AL | Water | Irregular, 10–50 nm | Uneven surface | [ | |
| Homogenization | KL | Water | Irregular, < 100 nm | Uneven surface | Nanocomposites: improvement of thermal and mechanical prop | [ |
| Ball milling | Irregular, | Uneven surface | [ | |||
| Low temperature milling | Irregular, ca. 10 nm | Uneven surface | [ | |||
A summary of common chemical and enzymatic treatment methods for producing (L)CNMs
| Methods | Chemical | Chemical recovery, impact 1 | Raw materials | CNM type | Surface groups | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Concentrated mineral acid hydrolysis | Sulfuric acid | − | Bleached wood pulp | CNCs | [HSO3] | [ | |
| Hydrochloric acid | − | Bleached softwood pulp | CNCs | None | [ | ||
| Phosphoric acid | − | Whatman paper | CNCs | [PO4] | [ | ||
| Sulfuric acid | − | Bleached wood pulp | CNCs + CNFs | [HSO3] | [ | ||
| Sulfuric acid | − | Poplar wood | LCNCs | [HSO3] | [ | ||
| Concentrated dicarboxylic acid hydrolysis | Oxalic acid or Maleic acid | + | Bleached wood pulp | CNCs + CNFs | [COOH] | [ | |
| Oxalic acid | + | Whatman paper | CNCs + CNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| Maleic acid | + | Unbleached hardwood pulp | LCNCs + LCNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| Acid hydrotrope | 0 | Undelignified birch fibers Wheat straw | LCNFs LCNFs | None None | [ [ | ||
| Maleic acid | + | Poplar, birch wood Switchgrass | LCNFs LCNFs | [COOH] [COOH] | [ [ | ||
| Dilute acid | Oxalic acid | 0 | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | None | [ | |
| Oxidation | Ammonia persulfate | − | Variety cellulosic materials | CNCs | [COOH] | [ | |
| Ammonia persulfate | − | Bleached birch pulp | CNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| Periodate + chlorite | − | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| TEMPO + NaBr + NaClO | 0 | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| TEMPO + NaBr + NaClO | − | Softwood mechanical pulp | LCNFs | [COOH] | [ | ||
| Solvent | DES | Choline chloride + urea | 0 | Bleached birch pulp | CNFs | None | [ |
| GVL | GVL | 0 | Unbleached GVL pulp | LCNFs | None | [ | |
| Organosolv | Ethanol + SO2 | 0 | Wood | LCNCs, LCNFs | None | [ | |
| Ionic Liquid | [BMIMCI] | 0 | Cellulose powder | CNFs | None | [ | |
| [BMIM][HSO4] | 0 | Bleached wood pulp; microcrystalline cellulose | CNCs | None | [ | ||
| [EMIM][OAc] | 0 | Wood | LCNCs | None | [ | ||
| Enzymes | Endoglucanase | ~ | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | None | [ | |
| Xylanase | ~ | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | None | [ | ||
| Complex enzymes | ~ | Bleached wood pulp | CNFs | None | [ | ||
1 − : difficult and negative impact; + : relatively easy and less impact; 0: moderate; ~ : benign and low dosage no need for recovery
Fig. 3Concentrated solid dicarboxylic acid (DCA) hydrolysis for integrated production of highly thermal stable and carboxylated DC-CNCs and DC-CNFs with acid recovery. a Schematic flow diagram; b, c A comparison of thermal stability of DC-CNCs after heating at 105 °C for 4 h with S-CNCs from S64T45t45 (b: 64 wt% sulfuric acid at 45 °C for 45 min) with that from O70T100t60 (c: 70 wt% oxalic acid at 110 °C for 60 min).
Reproduced with permission from Chen et al. [143] © The Royal Society of Chemistry
Fig. 4AFM images and AFM-measured height distributions of concentrated maleic acid (MA) hydrolysis M-CNCs (a–d) and M-CNFs (e–h) produced from bleached eucalyptus pulp fibers under various concentrated MA hydrolysis severities: CHFG = 1.0, 4.1; 6.8, 20.4 for a–d (CNCs), respectively; CHFG = 0.01, 0.09; 1.12, 2.04 for e–h (M-CNFs), respectively. The M-CNF shown in e–h were produced using only one pass through a microfluidizer. Scale bar = 500 nm for a–d and h, = 2 μm for e–g.
Reproduced with permission from Wang et al. [146] © Wiley‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
Fig. 5AFM images of cellulosic nano-whiskers (CNWs) with CNC-like morphology produced by concentrated MA hydrolysis of bleached eucalyptus pulp fibers (BEP) followed by mechanical fibrillation of the hydrolyzed cellulosic solids residue (CSR), in comparison with CNCs. All scale bars = 1000 nm. Top and middle rows: morphologies of CNWs from two high severities pilot-scale runs (left column M1: M70T120t120, right column M2: M75T100t120). Top row: 1 pass homogenization; middle row: three passes homogenization. Bottom row: morphologies of CNC from concentrated acid hydrolysis (left: sulfuric acid hydrolysis of spruce dissolving pulp from FPL pilot plant, right: MA hydrolysis of BEP under M2). Reproduced from Wang et al. [148]
Fig. 6AFM images (a1–d2) and AFM-measured height distributions (e1 and e2) of CNFs from concentrated p-toluenesulfonic acid (left panel, from Bian and co-workers [72]) and maleic acid (right panel, from Cai and co-workers [45]) hydrotropic fractionated birch wood solids.
Reproduced with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry©
Fig. 7Fractionation liquor dilution to precipitate lignin, followed by resin adsorption of residual dissolved lignin for recovering acid by crystallization through cooling after evaporation to re-concentrate.
Reproduced with permission from Cai et al. [121] Wiley–VCH GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
Fig. 8Shown are model representations of the (1) Mono-functional system found in cellulolytic fungi (i.e., Trichoderma reesei): Cel6A and Cel7A are processive cellobiohydrolase that initiate from the non-reducing and reducing ends of cellulose chains, respectively. Cel7B is an endoglucanase which hydrolyzes cellulose at mid-chain positions thus producing new chain ends for cellobiohydrolases to initiate hydrolysis. CDH is a cellobiose dehydrogenase which acts as a redox partner in the LPMO mechanism. (2) The multi-functional system used by some cellulolytic bacteria (i.e., Caldicellulosiruptor bescii) consists of a GH9 endoglucanase catalytic domain and a GH48 exoglucanase domain and also contains three cellulose-binding domains. This bacterial cellulase is one of the most effective enzyme systems ever reported for degrading cellulose and exhibits a “pit-digging” mechanism as shown in reference [203]. (3) The highly aggregated cellulosome consisting of various cellulase and cellulose-binding domains bound to a protein scaffold by the dockerin–cohesin interaction. This diagram represents the canonical Clostridium thermocellum CipA scaffolding structure containing nine type I cohesin domains (type II cohesin domains are not shown). Depicted are a CBM3 cellulose-binding domain, a Cel8A endoglucanase, and a CelS exoglucanase. This system works synergistically with free enzymes such as Cel9I, a processive endoglucanase. A detailed description of these enzyme systems is presented in reference [178–180]
Fig. 9Cellulase enzymes with different degradation mechanisms alter the characteristics of the nanocellulose products. a–c T. reesei Cel7A performs processive hydrolysis which results in high aspect ratio digestion products resembling CNFs. d–f CelA from C. bescii tends towards localized hydrolysis which facilitates intra-fibril fragmentation and results in production of more uniform fragments with aspect ratios typical of CNCs.
Adapted from Yarbrough et al. [190] with permission. Copyright © 2016, American Chemical Society
Fig. 10Cel7A preferentially initiates hydrolysis at mechanically induced defects in cellulose nanofibrils. a–c TEM images of Cladophora cellulose nanofibrils exhibiting defects. d–f TEM images of defect sites in Cladophora cellulose nanofibrils following partial digestion by Cel7A. g–i Schematic depiction of the process by which processive cellobiohydrolases engage molecular defects to produce “sharpened” morphologies near the defect site.
Adapted from Ciesielski et al. [204] with permission. Copyright © 2019 National Academy of Sciences