4.7 Article

Sustainable stabilization of oil in water emulsions by cellulose nanocrystals synthesized from deep eutectic solvents

Journal

CELLULOSE
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 1679-1689

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10570-017-1226-9

Keywords

Coalescence; Dispersing agent; Nanocellulose; Oil spill; O/w emulsion; Stability

Funding

  1. VIKE project (``Improvement of the oil spill prevention and response with the green chemicals'')
  2. Academy of Finland (``Arcrespo project'')

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There is an urgent global need to develop novel types of environmentally safe dispersing chemicals from renewable resources in order to reduce the environmental impact of oil spills. For this goal, cellulose, the most abundant natural polymeric source, is a promising green, nontoxic alternative that could replace the current synthetic surfactants. In this study, cellulose nanocrystals (CNC) synthesized using a deep eutectic solvent (DES) and two commercially available cellulose nanocrystals were used as marine diesel oil-water Pickering emulsion stabilizers. In particular, oil in water (o/w) emulsion formation and stability of emulsified oil during storing were addressed using a laser diffraction particle size analyzer, image analysis, and oil emulsion volume examination. The particle size of the o/w reference without CNCs after dispersing was over 50 mu m and coalescence occurred only a few minutes after the emulsifying mixing procedure. All three investigated CNCs were effective stabilizers for the o/w system (oil droplets size under 10 mu m) by preventing the oil droplet coalescence over time (6 weeks) and resulting in a stable creaming layer. The CNCs prepared using green DES systems boasted performance comparable to that of commercial CNCs, and they showed effectiveness at 0.1% dispersant dosage.

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