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Photoswitchable Superabsorbency Based on Nanocellulose Aerogels
Author(s) -
Kettunen Marjo,
Silvennoinen Riitta J.,
Houbenov Nikolay,
Nykänen Antti,
Ruokolainen Janne,
Sainio Jani,
Pore Viljami,
Kemell Marianna,
Ankerfors Mikael,
Lindström Tom,
Ritala Mikko,
Ras Robin H. A.,
Ikkala Olli
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201001431
Subject(s) - nanocellulose , aerogel , materials science , contact angle , wetting , chemical engineering , cellulose , aqueous solution , photocatalysis , bacterial cellulose , nanotechnology , titanium dioxide , composite material , organic chemistry , chemistry , engineering , catalysis
Chemical vapor deposition of a thin titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) film on lightweight native nanocellulose aerogels offers a novel type of functional material that shows photoswitching between water‐superabsorbent and water‐repellent states. Cellulose nanofibrils (diameters in the range of 5–20 nm) with native crystalline internal structures are topical due to their attractive mechanical properties, and they have become relevant for applications due to the recent progress in the methods of their preparation. Highly porous, nanocellulose aerogels are here first formed by freeze‐drying from the corresponding aqueous gels. Well‐defined, nearly conformal TiO 2 coatings with thicknesses of about 7 nm are prepared by chemical vapor deposition on the aerogel skeleton. Weighing shows that such TiO 2 ‐coated aerogel specimens essentially do not absorb water upon immersion, which is also evidenced by a high contact angle for water of 140° on the surface. Upon UV illumination, they absorb water 16 times their own weight and show a vanishing contact angle on the surface, allowing them to be denoted as superabsorbents. Recovery of the original absorption and wetting properties occurs upon storage in the dark. That the cellulose nanofibrils spontaneously aggregate into porous sheets of different length scales during freeze‐drying is relevant: in the water‐repellent state they may stabilize air pockets, as evidenced by a high contact angle, in the superabsorbent state they facilitate rapid water‐spreading into the aerogel cavities by capillary effects. The TiO 2 ‐coated nanocellulose aerogels also show photo‐oxidative decomposition, i.e., photocatalytic activity, which, in combination with the porous structure, is interesting for applications such as water purification. It is expected that the present dynamic, externally controlled, organic/inorganic aerogels will open technically relevant approaches for various applications.