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The pressure–volume–temperature relationship of cellulose
Author(s) -
Bastien Jallabert,
Guadalupe VacaMedina,
Sophie Cazalbou,
Antoine Rouilly
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
cellulose
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.948
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1572-882X
pISSN - 0969-0239
DOI - 10.1007/s10570-013-9986-3
Subject(s) - isobar , materials science , volume (thermodynamics) , thermodynamics , cellulose , isobaric process , chemistry , organic chemistry , nucleon , physics , atomic physics
Pressure–volume–temperature (PVT) mea- surements of a-cellulose with different water contents, were performed at temperatures from 25 to 180 °C and pressures from 19.6 to 196 MPa. PVT measurements allowed observation of the combined effects of pressure and temperature on the specific volume during cellulose thermo-compression. All isobars showed a decrease in cellulose specific volume with temperature. This densification is associated with a transition process of the cellulose, occurring at a temperature defined by the inflection point Tt of the isobar curve. Tt decreases from 110 to 40 °C with pressure and is lower as moisture content increases. For isobars obtained at high pressures and high moisture contents, after attaining a minimum, an increase in volume is observed with temperature that may be related to free water evaporation. PVT a-cellulose experimental data was compared with predicted values from a regression analysis of the Tait equations of state, usually applied to synthetic polymers. Good correla- tions were observed at low temperatures and low pressures. The densification observed from the PVT experimental data, at a temperature that decreases with pressure, could result from a sintering phenomenon, but more research is needed to actually understand the cohesion mechanism under these conditions

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