# Transparent Cellulose/Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotube Hybrids with Improved Ultraviolet-Shielding Properties Prepared from Cotton Textile Waste

**Authors:** Zhen Xu, Yingying Ma, Xiaohui Yao, Hongxu Wang, Qian Zhang, Qiance Ma, Zhanrui Zhang, Guangmei Xia, Jinming Zhang, Fengshan Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/polym16091269 · 2024-05-01

## TL;DR

Researchers made eco-friendly, UV-protective materials from cotton waste by combining cellulose with carbon nanotubes.

## Contribution

A novel hybrid material using cotton textile waste and MCNTs with enhanced UV-shielding and mechanical properties is developed.

## Key findings

- Cellulose/MCNT films with 4% MCNT content showed 19.91% transmittance in the 320–400 nm UV range.
- The mechanical strength of the hybrid films reached up to 20.58 MPa with 31.35% elongation at break.
- MCNTs improved UV-shielding and water resistance without requiring pretreatment.

## Abstract

Plastics offer many advantages and are widely used in various fields. Nevertheless, most plastics derived from petroleum are slow to degrade due to their stable polymer structure, posing serious threats to organisms and ecosystems. Thus, developing environmentally friendly and biodegradable plastics is imperative. In this study, biodegradable cellulose/multi-walled carbon nanotube (MCNT) hybrid gels and films with improved ultraviolet-shielding properties were successfully prepared using cotton textile waste as a resource. It was proven that MCNTs can be dispersed evenly in cellulose without any chemical or physical pretreatment. It was found that the contents of MCNTs had obvious effects on the structures and properties of hybrid films. Particularly, the averaged transmittance of cellulose/MCNT composite films in the range of 320–400 nm (T320–400) and 290–320 nm (T290–320) can be as low as 19.91% and 16.09%, when the content of MCNTs was 4.0%, much lower than those of pure cellulose films (T320–400: 84.12% and T290–320: 80.03%). Meanwhile, the water contact angles of the cellulose/MCNT films were increased by increasing the content of MCNTs. Most importantly, the mechanical performance of cellulose/MCNT films could be controlled by the additives of glycerol and MCNTs. The tensile strength of the cellulose/MCNT films was able to reach as high as 20.58 MPa, while the elongation at break was about 31.35%. To summarize, transparent cellulose/MCNT composites with enhanced ultraviolet-shielding properties can be manufactured successfully from low-cost cotton textile waste, which is beneficial not only in terms of environmental protection, but also the utilization of natural resources.

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11085122/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11085122