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Regenerated bacterial cellulose fibres

International Journal of Biological Macromolecules 2023 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Francisco A.G. Soares Silva, Francisco A.G. Soares Silva, Frank Meister, Frank Meister, Fernando Dourado Fernando Dourado Miguel Gama, Miguel Gama, Miguel Gama, Fernando Dourado

Summary

Bacterial cellulose produced by fermentation was processed into regenerated fibers as a sustainable textile alternative, demonstrating that bacterial cellulose can be dissolved and regenerated into fibrous materials with properties suitable for textile applications.

The global shortage of cotton for textile production, forces the exploitation of forests´ lignocellulosic biomass to produce man-made cellulosic fibres (MMCF). This has a considerable environmental impact, pressing the textile industry to search for new sustainable materials and to the development of sustainable recycling processes. Bacterial cellulose (BC), an exopolysaccharide produced by fermentation, could represent such an alternative. In particular, we tested the possibility of improving the mechanical properties of cellulose filaments with a low degree of polymerization (DP) by combining them with high DP from BC, so far exploited to little extent in the textile field. In this work, BC with different degrees of polymerization (DP<sub>cuaxam</sub>) (BC<sub>neat</sub>: 927; BC<sub>dep</sub>:634 and BC<sub>blend</sub>: 814) were dissolved in N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO) and their spinnability was studied. The rheological behaviour of the dopes was assessed and all were found to be spinnable, at suitable concentrations (BC<sub>neat</sub>:9.0 %; BC<sub>dep</sub>:12.2 %; BC<sub>blend</sub>:10.5 %). A continuous spinning was obtained and the resulting filaments offered similar mechanical performance to those of Lyocell. Further, the blending of BC pulps with different DPs (BC<sub>blend</sub>, obtained by combining BC<sub>neat</sub> and BC<sub>dep</sub>) allowed the production of fibres with higher stiffness (breaking tenacity 56.4 CN.tex<sup>-1</sup>) and lower elongation (8.29 %), as compared to samples with more homogeneous size distribution (neat BC and depolymerized BC).

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