In
this study, we report a novel, green chemistry approach for
creating new cellulose solvents based on a mixture of a natural deep
eutectic solvent (NADES) and a primary cellulose solvent. Because
of the strong hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor ability of both the
NADES and the primary cellulose solvent, the new mixed system is a
cellulose solvent, with an improved cellulose dissolution capacity.
We believe that this is a generic approach to prepare an entirely
new class of green solvent, capable of dissolving cellulose under
mild conditions. This in turn will facilitate the creation of a large
amount of new cellulose-based (soft) materials. To illustrate our
approach, we show that a NADES based on choline chloride + malic acid
can be used as cosolvent for the industrial cellulose solvent N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide monohydrate
(NMMO). The new mixed cellulose solvent system has improved cellulose
dissolution capacity and has a much broader processing window, which
allows working with dissolved cellulose at ambient temperatures, far
below 70 °C, where NNMO monohydrate will solidify. This, in turn,
can not only help to address the thermal instability issue of pure
NMMO when processed at elevated temperatures, but also expands the
working conditions of the lyocell process. The recyclability of the
solvent system was also conducted with a recovery yield of more than
95%, validating the sustainability of this solvent system. More importantly,
the cellulose dissolution capacity was still maintained after the
recycling process. To highlight the potential applications, we have
created highly anisotropic reconstituted cellulosic suspensions by
the solvent exchange process in different antisolvents.
Traditionally, chitin nanowhiskers (ChNW) have been synthesized using acid or alkali hydrolysis, which is not a fully green and sustainable process. Here, we demonstrate a novel, two-step, environmentally friendly process...
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