4.7 Article

Recycling of TEMPO-mediated oxidation medium and its effect on nanocellulose properties

Journal

CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
Volume 319, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2023.121168

Keywords

Cellulose nanofibers; TEMPO -mediated oxidation; Catalyst reusing; TEMPO; Nanocellulose; Circular economy

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The potential of TEMPO-mediated oxidation to produce CNFs is hindered by the use of expensive and environmentally harmful catalysts. This research identifies key parameters for reusing the TMO medium and their impact on CNF quality. Contrary to previous hypothesis, concentration of salts is not a key parameter; instead, high pulp consistency during oxidation leads to better CNF quality. Reusing the reaction medium up to six times significantly reduces catalyst dose, reaction time, and effluent, resulting in a threefold increase in CNF production.
The potential of TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidinyloxy)-mediated oxidation (TMO) to produce cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) is hindered using costly and environmentally harmful catalysts, limiting its large-scale implementation. To promote sustainability, the TMO medium should be reused but there is a lack of knowledge on this process. The novelty of this research is the identification of the key parameters that affect the recirculation of the TMO medium, and their impact on the quality of the oxidized pulps and CNF products. Contrary to previous hypothesis, results show that the accumulation of salts is not a key parameter; instead, the pulp consistency during oxidation plays a vital role since concentrations higher than 10 g/L led to better CNF quality. Thus, reusing 75 % of the reaction medium, when high pulp consistency is used, does not alter the CNF properties. By reusing the reaction medium up to six times, the catalyst dose is dramatically reduced by >90 % for TEMPO and 80 % for NaBr, compared to the conventional process (0.1 mmol of TEMPO/g and 1 mmol of NaBr/g without medium reuse). Additionally, the high consistency oxidation enables a reduction of >80 % in the reaction time and effluent, and thus a threefold increase in CNF production.

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