| Literature DB >> 34277566 |
Céline Montanari1, Peter Olsén1, Lars A Berglund1.
Abstract
The development of large, multifunctional structures from sustainable wood nanomaterials is challenging. The need to improve mechanical performance, reduce moisture sensitivity, and add new functionalities, provides motivation for nanostructural tailoring. Although existing wood composites are commercially successful, materials development has not targeted nano-structural control of the wood cell wall, which could extend the property range. For sustainable development, non-toxic reactants, green chemistry and processing, lowered cumulative energy requirements, and lowered CO2-emissions are important targets. Here, modified wood substrates in the form of veneer are suggested as nanomaterial components for large, load-bearing structures. Examples include polymerization of bio-based monomers inside the cell wall, green chemistry wood modification, and addition of functional inorganic nanoparticles inside the cell wall. The perspective aims to describe bio-based polymers and green processing concepts for this purpose, along with wood nanoscience challenges.Entities:
Keywords: biocomposite; biopolymer; building material; nanocellulose; nanocomposite; nanostructure; wood nanotechnology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34277566 PMCID: PMC8281292 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2021.682883
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
FIGURE 1Life cycle for wood-based biocomposites. Sustainable development requires that cumulative energy demand and carbon dioxide emissions are decreased, compared with existing materials.
FIGURE 2(A) Illustration of softwood microstructure and major cell wall components, the starting tissue for nanostructural modification. The cell wall is dominated by the middle lamella, and the thick secondary wall. The cellulose nanofibrils are reinforcing a hydrated mixture of hemicellulose and lignin polymers in the cell wall. (B) Wood substrate before and after delignification treatment. Porosity is generated also at nanoscale inside the cell wall. (C) Illustration of wood cell wall swelling, which facilitates chemical modification.
FIGURE 3(A) Chemical modification strategies for wood substrate functionalization. (B) Life cycle of fully bio-based transparent wood biocomposites. The bio-based transparent wood was prepared via green delignification treatment (peracetic acid) followed by solvent-free succinylation (succinic anhydride derived from bio-based succinic acid). A bio-based limonene acrylate monomer, designed from renewable limonene oxide (derived from limonene) and acrylic acid (derived from lactic acid), was impregnated and polymerized inside the wood substrate (Montanari et al., 2021).