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FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS FROM PAPER WASTES. II. CELLULOSE HYDROGELS WITH HIGH WATER RETEN-TION CAPACITY OBTAINED FROM SOLUTIONS OF WASTE PAPER IN DMAC/LiCl
Author(s) -
А. М. Михаилиди,
Nina Yefimovna Kotelnikova
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
himiâ rastitelʹnogo syrʹâ
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.2
H-Index - 6
eISSN - 1029-5151
pISSN - 1029-5143
DOI - 10.14258/jcprm.2021039269
Subject(s) - self healing hydrogels , chemical engineering , cellulose , dissolution , materials science , leaching (pedology) , raw material , regenerated cellulose , aqueous solution , dimethylacetamide , chemistry , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , solvent , environmental science , soil science , engineering , soil water
An efficient process for recycling paper and cardboard wastes via dissolution in N,N-dimethylacetamide/lithium chloride (DMAc/LiCl) system and regeneration from solutions to obtain hydrogels has been developed. Pretreatment of waste paper has been carried out by thermal defibrillation of waste paper in water and homogenization to obtain fibre samples. The dissolution of fibre materials has been performed in two ways varying the process temperature and the way the reagents have been introduced. Regeneration from solutions has been carried out by spontaneous gelation without the use of antisolvents, at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. As a result, hydrogels were obtained which differed in color and transparency depending on feedstock. The physico-chemical properties of the hydrogels have been characterized. It has been shown that they were stable in an aqueous medium, capable of retaining a significant amount of water (over 4000 wt.%), and were porous systems which has been confirmed by scanning electron microscopy. According to a wide-angle X-ray scattering, the crystallographic structure of the pristine waste paper samples corresponded to a structural modification of cellulose I. Regenerated samples as freeze-dried hydrogels had the structure of cellulose II. A functional and an elemental composition studied with FTIR spectroscopy and an energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis characterized these hydrogels as the cellulose samples containing small amount of inorganic impurities. The resulting hydrogels had a system of through pores of different sizes, and this predetermined their use as adsorbents and active matrices.

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