4.8 Article

A fully bio-based wood adhesive valorising hemicellulose-rich sidestreams from the pulp industry

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 3322-3333

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0gc04273k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. VINN Excellence Centre BiMaC Innovation
  2. strategic innovation programme BioInnovation
  3. Vinnova
  4. Formas
  5. Swedish Energy Agency
  6. Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation through Wallenberg Wood Science Center

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This study explores the utilization of hemicelluloses, a byproduct from pulping, as a bio-based and harmless substitute for wood adhesives. It demonstrates that combining hemicelluloses with chitosan can achieve excellent bonding performance and water resistance, providing a sustainable alternative to fossil-based materials in the quest for a more environmentally friendly society.
Today, most wood adhesives are prepared from fossil-based polymers and contain hazardous components, e.g., formaldehyde. With the growing environmental concern there is an urge to develop bio-based and harmless substitutes. In this study, the ambition is to explore and valorise hemicelluloses, a biproduct from pulping, as the main component in wood adhesives. Wood adhesives were prepared from different sources: xylan from beech wood, hemicellulose-rich liquids obtained from hydrolysis of hardwood, and ultrafiltered softwood hemicellulose recovered from the process water of a thermomechanical pulp mill. Hemicelluloses themselves do not exhibit sufficient bonding performance, but excellent bond strength and water resistance were obtained in combination with poly(vinyl amine). It was also demonstrated that chitosan can be used as a bio-based amino-functional alternative to synthetic poly(vinyl amine), with similar or superior properties. Hemicelluloses alone show insufficient water resistance, but hemicelluloses in combination with chitosan exhibit exceptionally good bonding performance, especially regarding water resistance. Adhesives prepared from liquids rich in hardwood- and softwood hemicelluloses showed similar bond strength in combination with amino-functional polymers (poly(vinyl amine) and chitosan), regardless of their differences in structure. The current study constitutes an example on how sidestreams from the pulp industry in combination with chitosan can be used to substitute fossil-based materials in the quest for a more sustainable society.

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