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Alkali induced changes in spatial distribution of functional groups in carboxymethylated cellulose

Cellulose 2024 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Paul Bogner, Thomas Bechtold, Avinash P. Manian, Thomas Bechtold, Tung Pham Tung Pham Avinash P. Manian, Thomas Bechtold, Tung Pham Tung Pham

Summary

Researchers investigated how different alkali concentrations affect the carboxymethylation of viscose cellulose fibers and their subsequent ability to adsorb the cationic dye methylene blue. They found that higher alkali concentrations increased the overall degree of carboxymethylation but altered the spatial distribution of functional groups within the fibers. The study provides insights relevant to developing cellulose-based materials for wastewater treatment applications.

Study Type Environmental

Abstract The aim of the work was to investigate treatment parameters that exert most influence on performance of cellulose fibers carboxymethylated from aqueous solutions. Viscose fibers were carboxymethylated in alkaline solutions of sodium monochloroacetate at two temperatures (30 °C, 50 °C) and with different levels of alkali (0.5 mol/L and 4 mol/L NaOH). The degree of carboxymethylation was assessed with both back titration and conductometric titration methods, and the performance of carboxymethylated fibers was assessed from their propensity for sorption of the cationic dye methylene blue, a putative wastewater contaminant. Higher degrees of carboxymethylation were generally observed for fibers carboxymethylated in 4 mol/L NaOH, but in dye sorption propensities, the fibers carboxymethylated in 0.5 mol/L NaOH performed better. A combination of observations from dye sorption, color measurement and conductometric titration suggested that dye permeation was greater through fibers carboxymethylated in 0.5 mol/L NaOH as compared to 4 mol/L NaOH. As permeability differences were evinced in cases also where the degrees of carboxymethylation were very similar, it appears that the reaction conditions (i.e., alkali content during carboxymethylation), in addition to degree of carboxymethylation, affected fiber performance. The effect of alkali may stem from their influence on the topographical distribution of the substituted carboxymethyl functional groups.

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