4.7 Article

Reduced graphene oxide influences morphology and thermal properties of silk/cellulose biocomposites

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.123971

Keywords

Cellulose; Semi-crystallinity; ?-Sheet; Reduced graphene oxide; Morphology; Conductivity

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In recent years, the research on biomaterials such as silk and cellulose has rapidly expanded due to their abundance, low cost, and tunable properties. This study investigated how the addition of reduced graphene oxide (rGO) affects the properties of cellulose-silk composites, such as carbohydrate crystallinity, protein secondary structure formation, and ionic conductivity. The results showed that the addition of rGO influenced the morphological and thermal properties of the composites and impacted the ionic conductivity by modifying the cellulose crystallinity and silk beta-sheet content.
In recent decades, research into biomaterials such as silk or cellulose has rapidly expanded due to their abundance, low cost, and tunable morphological as well as physicochemical properties. Cellulose is appealing due to its crystalline and amorphous polymorphs while silk is attractive due to its tunable secondary structure formations which is made up of flexible protein fibers. When these two biomacromolecules are mixed, their properties can be modified by changing their material composition and fabrication methodology, e.g., solvent type, coagulation agent, and temperature. Reduced graphene oxide (rGO) can be used to increase molecular interactions and stabilization of natural polymers. In this study, we sought to determine how small amounts of rGO affect the carbohydrate crystallinity and protein secondary structure formation as well as physicochemical properties and how they affect overall ionic conductivity of cellulose-silk composites. Properties of fabricated silk and cellulose composites with and without rGO were investigated using Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, Scanning Electron Microscopy, X-Ray Scattering, Differential Scanning Calorimetry, Dielectric Relaxation Spectroscopy, and Thermogravimetric Analysis. Our results show that addition of rGO influenced morphological and thermal properties of cellulose-silk biocomposites, specifically through cellulose crystallinity and silk beta-sheet content which further impacted ionic conductivity.

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