Characterisation of bacterial cellulose partly acetylated by dimethylacetamide/lithium chloride

被引:30
作者
de Marco Lima, G. [2 ]
Sierakowski, M. -R. [1 ]
Faria-Tischer, P. C. S. [1 ]
Tischer, C. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] BIOPOL Biopolymers Lab, BR-81531990 Curitiba, PR, Brazil
[2] Univ Vale Itajai, PMCF Mestrado Ciencias Farmaceut, BR-88302202 Itajai, SC, Brazil
来源
MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING C-MATERIALS FOR BIOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS | 2011年 / 31卷 / 02期
关键词
Bacterial cellulose; Gluconoacetobacter hansenii; Dimethylacetamide (DMAc); Lithium chloride; Acetic anhydride; Nuclear magnetic resonance; LITHIUM-CHLORIDE; N; N-DIMETHYLACETAMIDE; DMAC/LICL; DEGRADATION; DERIVATIVES; ACETATES; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.msec.2010.08.017
中图分类号
TB3 [工程材料学]; R318.08 [生物材料学];
学科分类号
082905 [生物质能源与材料]; 100103 [病原生物学];
摘要
Cellulose is a water-insoluble polysaccharide used at an industrial scale for the manufacture of paper and films or in the dust form, natural, hydrolysed or derivatised. The cellulose produced by G. hansenii (former A. xylinum) has a structure identical to that of plants, but is free of lignin and hemicellulose, with several unique physical-chemical properties. The main barrier to the use of cellulose is its insolubility in water and most organic solvents, but soluble derivatives can be obtained with the use of ionic solvents. Bacterial cellulose, produced in a static, 4% glucose medium, was dissolved in hot DMAc/LiCl (120, 150 or 170 degrees C). The solution was analysed by C-13 NMR, and the effect of the dissolution on the crystalline state was shown by X-ray crystallography. The crystalline structure was lost upon dissolution, becoming amorphous; this was also observed for Avicel (R) plant cellulose. The soluble cellulose was partly acetylated in acetic anhydride with acetic anhydride-cellulose ratios of 1:50, 1:6 and 1:12 (w/v). The resulting cellulose acetates were examined by infrared spectroscopy, and the best result was 43% (w/v). The degree of acetylation was determined via H-1 NMR spectroscopy by comparing the area of the glucose ring at 2.60-5.20 ppm and that of the methyl proton of the acetate group at 1.80-2.20 ppm. The C-13 NMR spectra showed acetylation at C6 >> C2>C3 at 60-80 ppm, with C1 signals at similar to 100-104 ppm. The derivatisation of bacterial cellulose in DMAc/LiCl/acetic anhydride (1:4:50, v/v/v) gave rise to 87% substitution. The process of dissolution of the bacterial cellulose is essential for the analysis of the insoluble polymer in water, facilitating analysis and characterisation of these composites by C-13 NMR spectroscopy, size exclusion chromatography and light scattering techniques. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:190 / 197
页数:8
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