4.7 Article

Surface Engineering of Regenerated Cellulose Nanocomposite Films with High Strength, Ultraviolet Resistance, and a Hydrophobic Surface

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 15, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym15061427

Keywords

regenerative cellulose film; octadecyltrichlorosilane; surface silanization modification; hydrophobic surface; ultraviolet blocking

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Regenerated cellulose films doped with nano-SiO2 were synthesized using an environmentally friendly solvent, resulting in films with excellent barrier properties. These films exhibited high mechanical strength, hydrophobicity, UV resistance, and oxygen barrier properties, making them suitable for packaging applications.
Regenerated cellulose packaging materials can alleviate the environmental pollution and carbon emissions caused by conventional plastics and other chemicals. They require regenerated cellulose films with good barrier properties, such as strong water resistance. Herein, using an environmentally friendly solvent at room temperature, a straightforward procedure for synthesizing these regenerated cellulose (RC) films, with excellent barrier properties and doping with nano-SiO2, is presented. After the surface silanization modification, the obtained nanocomposite films exhibited a hydrophobic surface (HRC), in which the nano-SiO2 provided a high mechanical strength, whereas octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS) provided hydrophobic long-chain alkanes. The contents of the nano-SiO2 and the concentrations of the OTS/n-hexane in regenerated cellulose composite films are crucial, as they define its morphological structure, tensile strength, UV-shielding ability, and the other performance of these composite films. When the nano-SiO2 content was 6%, the tensile stress of the composite film (RC6) increased by 41.2%, the maximum tensile stress was 77.22 MPa, and the strain-at-break was 14%. Meanwhile, the HRC films had more superior multifunctional integrations of tensile strength (73.91 MPa), hydrophobicity (HRC WCA = 143.8 degrees), UV resistance (>95%), and oxygen barrier properties (5.41 x 10(-11) mL center dot cm/m(2)center dot s center dot Pa) than the previously reported regenerated cellulose films in packaging materials. Moreover, the modified regenerated cellulose films could biodegrade entirely in soil. These results provide an experimental basis for preparing regenerated-cellulose-based nanocomposite films that exhibit a high performance in packaging applications.

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