4.7 Article

Development of microbeads from unmodified biomass with tunable size and competitive mechanical properties

Journal

CELLULOSE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10570-023-05393-4

Keywords

Lignin; Cellulose; Biomass; Microbeads; Biodegradable; Mechanical testing

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Despite regulations, plastic microbeads are still widely used in PCCPs, causing microplastic pollution. This study proposes a sustainable alternative by producing microbeads from biomass solutions and anti-solvent precipitation. By adjusting biomass source, concentration, and polymerization, as well as extrusion and precipitation conditions, the resulting microbeads have similar properties to commercial plastic microbeads. The addition of lignin improves processability but results in stiffer microbeads.
Despite national and international regulations, plastic microbeads are still widely used in personal care and consumer products (PCCPs) as exfoliants and rheological modifiers, causing significant microplastic pollution following use. As a sustainable alternative, microbeads were produced by extrusion of biomass solutions and precipitation into anti-solvent. Despite using novel blends of biodegradable, non-derivatized biomass including cellulose and Kraft lignin, resulting microbeads are within the shape, size, and stiffness range of commercial plastic microbeads, even without crosslinking. Solution processability and resulting bead shape and Young's modulus can be tuned via biomass source, concentration, and degree of polymerization; biomass concentration, extrusion geometry, and precipitation and extraction conditions control the bead size. Lignin incorporation reduces the solution viscosity, which improves processability but also produces flatter beads with higher moduli than cellulose-only microbeads. While some lignin leaches from the beads when stored in water, adding surfactants like sodium dodecyl sulfate suppresses this effect, resulting in good mechanical stability over 2 months with no noticeable structural degradation. The stability of these mixed-source biomass microbeads-despite the absence of chemical crosslinking or derivatization-makes this route a promising, robust approach for obtaining environmentally-benign microbeads of tunable size and stiffness for use in PCCPs.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available