Self-dispersion of Two Natural Polysaccharides for Granular Composites
Herbert Wang, Yin Fang, Yiliang Lin, Jiuyun Shi

TL;DR
This study explores the self-dispersion of starch and chitosan, natural polysaccharides, creating mesoscale composites with enhanced properties through ionic interactions, characterized by advanced imaging and calorimetry techniques.
Contribution
It demonstrates the formation of stable, stronger composites via ionic interactions, revealing a new mechanism for dispersing chitosan within starch matrices.
Findings
Enhanced miscibility of chitosan in starch granules.
Ionic interactions facilitate microbundle disassembly.
Formation of chemically stronger, biodegradable composites.
Abstract
We envision that dispersion between two polymeric materials on mesoscales would create new composites with properties that are much more superior to the components alone. Here we elucidate the dispersion between two of most abundant natural polysaccharides, starch and chitosan, which form mesoscale composites that may promise many applications. By using X-ray microscopic imaging, small-angle X-ray scattering, and differential scanning calorimetry, we were able to characterize the interactions of chitosan and starch in the mesoscale composites. The morphology of the composite is far more complex from the simple mixture of starch granules with a nominal size of a few micrometers and chitosan microbundles of tens and hundreds of micrometers. This unique morphology can only be explained by the enhanced miscibility of chitosan in a starch granular matrix. It is evidenced that there is a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsNanocomposite Films for Food Packaging · Hydrogels: synthesis, properties, applications · Advanced Cellulose Research Studies
