4.7 Article

Alkali treatment of cellulose II fibres and effect on dye sorption

Journal

CARBOHYDRATE POLYMERS
Volume 84, Issue 1, Pages 299-307

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.carbpol.2010.11.037

Keywords

Freundlich isotherm; Langmuir isotherm; Adsorption; Polysaccharides; Lyocell; Sodium hydroxide; Hydrolyzed reactive dye; Reactive structural fraction (RSF)

Funding

  1. The University of Leeds and Lenzing AG

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To understand the effect of alkali treatment on sorption behaviour of cellulose II fibres, samples were continuously pre-treated using NaOH over a concentration range of 0.0-7.15 mol dm(-3), with varying tension: treated substrates were dyed with hydrolysed C. I. Reactive Red 120. Greatest adsorption of dye occurs for cellulose II fibres treated with 2.53 and 3.33 mol dm(-3) aqueous NaOH solution. Correlation to sorption isotherms is most closely associated with a Langmuir type isotherm, but correlation to the Freundlich isotherm is still significant, indicating sorption via a combination of Langmuir and Freundlich isotherms. Adsorption energy (Delta G(0)) increases with increasing NaOH concentration to a maxima between 2.53 and 3.33 mol dm(-3) NaOH and then decreases with further increase in NaOH concentration. Equilibrium dye sorption shows good correlation with water sorption as assessed by the reactive structural fraction (RSF) theory. Theoretical monolayer capacity (q(0)) increases with increasing NaOH concentration to a maxima at 3.33 mol dm(-3) NaOH and then decreases with further increase in NaOH concentration: q(0) is significantly in excess of the number of available specific sites (-COO-Na+) in the substrate, indicating non-site-specific interactions, more typical of a Freundlich isotherm. Pores in the fibre significantly affected by alkali treatment (<20 angstrom diameter) and accessibility of dye (14 angstrom) sorption into those pores account the differences observed herein; maximum q(e), q(0) and Delta G(0) are observed for cellulose II fibre treated with 2.53-3.33 mol dm(-3) NaOH as this concentration range affects the greatest increase in accessible pore volume in the fibres. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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