Kinetic study and real-time monitoring strategy for tempo-mediated oxidation of bleached eucalyptus fibers
Download 1.85 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
s10570-022-05013-7
Table 5 Reaction rate (k
1 ), y-intercept and experimental data fitting (R 2 ) as function of refining degree of fibers PFI (rev) °SR CD (µeq/g) k 1 (s −1 ) [10 –4 ] y-intercept R 2 0 16 33.05 3.63 7.35 0.9798 2500 19 53.61 3.78 7.31 0.9955 5000 24 71.88 3.88 7.29 0.9945 7500 32 78.00 4.05 7.39 0.9985 10,000 41 102.69 4.12 7.37 0.9884 Cellulose 1 3 Vol.: (0123456789) costs. In this context, TEMPO prices have been regarded as a key barrier for the industrial-scale production of nanoscale oxycellulose (Clauser et al. 2022 ). The improvement in terms of reaction time due to the increase of the initial surface area of the fibers, this is PFI refining, is not justified because of the lower yield (waste generation) and additional energy consumption (4.44 kWh/kg for 10,000 PFI revolutions). According to the literature, pH of roughly 10–11 should be maintained to ensure optimal conditions of reaction. As seen from Fig. 5 , the difference in pH from 10.5 to 11.5 shows, at the beginning of the process, higher reaction rates (inset figure) and a higher conversion for the same consumption of NaOH (Lin et al. 2018 ). Differences beyond 0.5–0.6 mmol COO – /g are non-significant, and thus the final oxidation degree does not depend on pH over this narrow range. Differing from previous results, reactions conducted with pH values above 11 did not result in fibers with lower oxidation degree. Taking into account the pK a values of hypobro- mous and hypoclorous acids, respectively 8.6 and 7.5 (Kim et al. 2021 ), their ionization under the pH range studied is quantitative, with little difference at pH 10.5 or pH 11.5. Therefore, all possible effects of OH – concentration are related to cellulose itself. With a pK a value between 12 and 13 for the primary hydroxyl groups (Bialik et al. 2016 ), an increase in pH from 10.5 to 11.5 is enough to explain why the polymer is more accessible during the first stages of the reaction in the latter case. Insights into the progressive accessibility of primary hydroxyl groups through OH(6) oxidation and depolymerization Reservations to reality compel us to justify why homogeneous models satisfactorily describe the TEMPO-mediated oxidation of cellulosic fibers, while etherification of cellulose, for instance, tend to be better fitted by chemisorption models (Aguado et al. 2018 ). It is possible to observe from Fig. 2 that for lower temperature and concentration of catalysts and co-catalysts, there is an increase in the latency time until the reaction assumes an apparent first- order pattern. That could be explained by lower ener- getic availability from a thermodynamic perspective. Download 1.85 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling