Ionic liquid-mediated regeneration of cellulose dramatically improves decrystallization, TEMPO-mediated oxidation and alkyl/alkenyl succinylation
Li, Z., Zhan, G., Charalampopoulos, D.
It is advisable to refer to the publisher's version if you intend to cite from this work. See Guidance on citing. To link to this item DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.123983 Abstract/SummaryThis work demonstrated a successful strategy that simple ionic liquids (ILs) mediated pretreatment could effectively reduce crystallinity of cellulose from 71 % to 46 % (by C2MIM.Cl) and 53 % (by C4MIM.Cl). The IL-mediated regeneration of cellulose greatly promoted its reactivity for TEMPO-catalyzed oxidation, which the resulting COO− density (mmol/g) increased from 2.00 for non-IL-treated cellulose to 3.23 (by C2MIM.Cl) and 3.42 (C4MIM.Cl); and degree of oxidation enhanced from 35 % to 59 % and 62 %, respectively. More significantly, the yield of oxidized cellulose increased from 4 % to 45–46 %, by 11-fold. IL-regenerated cellulose can also be directly subjected to alkyl/alkenyl succinylation without TEMPO-mediated oxidation, producing nanoparticles with properties similar to oxidized celluloses (55-74 nm in size, −70–79 mV zeta-potential and 0.23–0.26 PDI); but in a much higher overall yield (87–95 %) than IL-regeneration-coupling-TEMPO-oxidation (34–45 %). Alkyl/alkenyl succinylated TEMPO-oxidized cellulose showed 2–2.5 times higher ABTS* scavenging ability than non-oxidized cellulose; however, alkyl/alkenyl succinylation also resulted in a significant decline in Fe2+ chelating property.
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