Kinetic study and real-time monitoring strategy for tempo-mediated oxidation of bleached eucalyptus fibers
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- Results and discussion
Table 1 Reaction
conditions for each kinetic study NaClO: 5 mmol/g; pH: 10.5 Variable Temperature (°C) TEMPO (mg/g) NaBr (mg/g) PFI refining (rev) Temperature 5 16 100 0 10 16 100 0 15 16 100 0 20 16 100 0 25 16 100 0 30 16 100 0 35 16 100 0 TEMPO catalyst 20 2 100 0 20 4 100 0 20 8 100 0 20 32 100 0 NaBr catalyst 20 16 25 0 20 16 50 0 20 16 200 0 Refining degree 20 16 100 2500 20 16 100 5000 20 16 100 7500 20 16 100 10,000 Cellulose 1 3 Vol.: (0123456789) of k 1 , which will be assumed as the kinetic constant of the whole reaction (Eq. 3 ). where [R-CH 2 OH] 0 and [R-COOH] t are the initial concentration of primary alcohols and the carboxyl con- tent at time t in the BEKP fibers, respectively, and both expressed in µeq/g. k 1 is the kinetic constant, expressed in reciprocal time units. A value of 1500 µeq/g was assumed for [R−CH 2 OH ] 0 , as it has been reported to be the maximum CC that can be achieved through TEMPO-mediated oxidation (Saito et al. 2007 ). Higher values might be found in the literature but can be attrib- uted to differences on the quantification methods (Fuji- sawa et al. 2011 ). Conversion, expressed as the relationship between the reacted CH 2 O to COO − groups compared to the experimental oxidation limit, this is the maximum car- boxyl content achieved, was calculated according to Eq. 4 . where CC t is the carboxyl content at time t, CC 0 is the initial carboxyl content of the neat fiber, and CC max is the maximum carboxyl content experimen- tally achieved during oxidation. The time required for a complete conversion (t final ) was calculated from the linear regression resulting from Eq. 5 , where (1 − X) 1∕2 was expressed as function of time (Sbiai et al. 2011 ). The activation energy (Ea) was calculated according to the Arrhenius equation, which is given in Eq. 6 . where k is the kinetic constant, A is the pre-exponen- tial factor, also known as Arrhenius factor, R is the universal gas constant, and T is the temperature. (3) ln ([ R−CH 2 OH ] 0 − [ R − COOH] t ) = − k 1 t + ln ([ R − CH 2 OH ] 0 ) (4) X = CC t − CC 0 CC max − CC 0 (5) (1 − X) 1∕2 = 1 − t t final (6) k = A ⋅ e − Ea RT Results and discussion Validation of NaOH consumption as real-time monitoring parameter The relationship between NaOH consumption during TEMPO-mediated oxidation and the oxidation degree of fibers has been already reported (Sun et al. 2005 ). However, this correlation may depend on the avail- ability of –CH 2 OH groups at the fiber surface and their concentration. An appropriate study correlating the NaOH consumption with the CC of the TEMPO- oxidized fibers at different reaction conditions (i.e. temperature, TEMPO/NaBr concentration, surface area of the fibers) is required for suitably monitoring the evolution of the reaction in real time. This would underpin the hypothesis of using the NaOH consump- tion for the real-time monitoring of the TEMPO- mediated oxidation kinetics and, thus, minimizing the use of time-consuming techniques such as the deter- mination of the CC during an industrial batch produc- tion of TEMPO-oxidized fibers. Figure 1 shows the correlation between the NaOH consumption, in mmol/g, and CC, in µeq/g, at different temperatures (Fig. 1 A), different TEMPO concentrations (Fig. 1 B), different NaBr concentrations (Fig. 1 C), and different cationic demand of the fibers (Fig. 1 D). The CC of the samples evolved linearly with the NaOH consumption during TEMPO-mediated oxi- dation in all cases. However, while the variation of the temperature (Fig. 1 A), the NaBr concentration (Fig. 1 C) and the initial cationic demand of the fibers (Fig. 1 D) did not affect the tendency, leading to simi- lar slopes and y-intercepts (Tables S1, S3 and S4 from the Supplementary Material), the case of TEMPO catalyst (Fig. 1 B) differed from the rest (Table S2). In this case, as the amount of TEMPO increased from 2 to 16 mg/g in the reaction media, the consumption of NaOH decreased for a certain CC. However, a similar slope was found between 16 and 32 mg/g indicating no effect of increasing the dosage of TEMPO catalyst from 16 mg/g. As revealed in Tables S1 to S4, the correlation factors (R 2 ) were around 0.99 in all cases, indicating an excellent fitting of the linear regression for all the reaction conditions and, thus, the suitabil- ity of NaOH consumption as an indicator of the CC during TEMPO-mediated oxidation. Albeit it is not shown in Fig. 1 , additional NaOH was added to the Cellulose 1 3 Vol:. (1234567890) fibers, and no change was observed on the CC, find- ing its maximum at 800 µeq/g. This is in accordance with previously published studies, where this maxi- mum was already reported at 5 mmol/g of NaClO addition (Serra et al. 2017 ). The linear regressions from Fig. 1 A, C, D exhibited similar average slopes and y-intercepts (corresponding to the theoretical initial CC of the fibers), and low standard deviation. Except for the case represented in Fig. 1 B, corresponding to variable amounts of TEMPO, the correlation between the CC and the NaOH consumption was the same regardless the reaction conditions, which is of interest for the industrialization of the reaction. This clearly confirms that NaOH consumption could be easily used as real- time monitoring parameter of the TEMPO-mediated oxidation at large scale, and reveals a new opportunity for this reaction not only in batch processing, but also for continuous production. Focusing on the exception, the lowest CC at low TEMPO addition (2 to 4 mg/g) for a certain NaClO addition (i.e. 5 mmol/g) was previously observed by Serra et al. ( 2017 ). Lin et al. ( 2018 ) also found a strong influence of TEMPO during the formation of carboxyl groups at the fibers. However, the authors worked only in two conditions regarding TEMPO, in absence and containing 16 mg/g. Considering the reaction mechanism, widely described in the literature, limiting the presence of TEMPO has a direct influence over the reaction from Eq. 1 , corresponding to the formation of the aldehyde group, which is the most determinant in the process of TEMPO-mediated oxidation of cellulose. Further, the lower generation of aldehyde groups also limits the formation of carboxyl groups, which is the selected parameter to monitor the oxidative reaction (Saito and Isogai 2004 ; Sun et al. 2005 ; Dai et al. 2011 ; Isogai et al. 2011 ). The slope between the CC and NaOH consumption reveals that the reaction maximum conversion from –CH 2 OH to –COO − groups is satisfactorily achieved for dosages between 8 and 32 mg/g of TEMPO, to be significantly decreased below 8 mg/g. This can be clearly observed in Table S2, where the slopes at different TEMPO dosages are provided and similar values from 8 to Download 1.85 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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