Abstract
Cellulose nanopapers are attractive materials with outstanding mechanical and optical properties, yet their production is slow. The use of non-aqueous suspension media, in particular ethanol, for nanopaper production reduced filtration times by 73 %. Nanopapers prepared from ethanolic suspensions possessed higher porosities than those prepared from aqueous suspensions, reducing their transparency and tensile properties. Rewetting nanopapers prepared from ethanolic suspensions with water and subsequent drying yielded nanopapers with densities essentially the same as those prepared from aqueous suspensions, which in turn greatly increased mechanical properties and transparency. The strain to failure of rewetted and dried nanopapers prepared from ethanolic suspensions increased from 2.8 % to 7.5 %. The strain to failure of rewetted and dried nanopapers prepared from ethanolic suspensions was also greater than that of nanopapers prepared from aqueous suspensions (3.3 %) albeit at the expense of a 20 % decrease in tensile strength and modulus, which was shown to be attributable to a lower bonding contribution between fibrils in the network. The increased strain to failure results in significantly increased work of fracture. The rewetting and drying treatment also yielded nanopapers with high total luminous transmittance and haze.
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
|---|---|
| Aufsatznummer | 124443 |
| Fachzeitschrift | Carbohydrate Polymers |
| Jahrgang | 370 |
| DOIs | |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 15 Dez. 2025 |
Fördermittel
We are grateful to Mag. Dr. Stefan Puchegger of the Faculty Center for Nanostructure Research at the University of Vienna for his help and guidance in using the SEM, Klaus Ritter for the preliminary experiments, which motivated us to further investigate the effect of rewetting of nanopapers, and Fabian Edinger for assistance in determining the CNF-free filtration speed. F.M. is grateful to the University of Vienna and the Institute of Materials Chemistry for funding (#371300).
| Träger | Trägernummer |
|---|---|
| Universität Wien | 371300 |
ÖFOS 2012
- 104019 Polymerwissenschaften
- 104011 Materialchemie