Tuning the morphology of aerosolised cellulose nanocrystals via controlled aggregation
Daniel Warnes, Jia Hui Lim, Richard M. Parker, Bruno Frka-Petesic, Ray Freshwater, Camila Honorato-Rios, Yu Ogawa, Chiara Giorio, Silvia Vignolini

TL;DR
This study investigates how aerosolisation affects the size and shape of cellulose nanocrystals, revealing that surface modifications and suspension stability significantly influence the resulting particle morphology.
Contribution
It introduces a new experimental setup to analyze aerosolisation effects on CNCs and highlights the importance of surface functionality and colloidal stability in controlling particle morphology.
Findings
Aerosolisation causes larger particles in colloidally-metastable CNC suspensions.
Unfunctionalised CNCs produce smaller particles despite poor suspension stability.
Surface functionality and suspension stability are key to controlling aerosolised CNC morphology.
Abstract
Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are polycrystalline, rod-shaped nanoparticles isolated from cellulose, which have attracted increasing attention for a wide variety of applications. While there has been significant research into CNCs in suspensions, hydrogels and films, there have been remarkably few studies that investigated their properties during and after aerosolisation. Here, we studied how aerosolisation impacts the size and morphology of different CNCs suspensions with different surface functionalities. By building a new experimental setup, we observed that colloidally-metastable aqueous CNC suspensions, achieved by carboxylation of the surface hydroxy groups or by exposure to high intensity ultrasonication, yield large particulates upon aerosolisation under ambient temperatures. In contrast, aqueous suspensions of unfunctionalised CNCs tend to produce, upon aerosolisation, smaller…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Cellulose Research Studies
