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Properties of cell walls prepared using supercritical fluids

Properties of cell walls prepared using supercritical fluids. Paul Callaghan (VUW), Robert Franich, Stefan J. Hill, and Roger Newman (Scion). Presentation overview: Wood cell walls polymers water Fibre-saturation point Supercritical CO 2 Water extraction Wood material properties

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Properties of cell walls prepared using supercritical fluids

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  1. Properties of cell walls prepared using supercritical fluids Paul Callaghan (VUW), Robert Franich, Stefan J. Hill, and Roger Newman (Scion)

  2. Presentation overview: • Wood cell walls • polymers • water • Fibre-saturation point • Supercritical CO2 • Water extraction • Wood material properties • Summary

  3. Structure of wood cell wall H2O ?

  4. Fibre-saturation point -a chemical phenomenon at molecular/supramolecular scales Cells from green wood – full lumens & fully-water-swollen cell walls – xylem sap FSP – empty lumens & fully-water-swollen cell walls • FSP- independent of scale –log/fibres • Discrete water binding sites - OH • Exothermic wood cell wall hydration – • a molecular chemical interaction Stamm et al, 1935-1971: cell water as gas, liquid, ‘solid solution’phases

  5. Partial specific volume of water at %mc below FSP ‘Compression’ of water molecules at binding sites 1000 bar 200 bar Stamm & Seborg, 1935; Stamm, 1967

  6. Wood material dynamics Wood at variable moisture content – dimensional, conformational & MoE change Water an integral part of the cell wall supramolecular cellulose-hemicellulose-lignin nanocomposite dynamics- - ‘Velcro’ mechanics Where is water located and how structured? Difficulty in preparing wood specimens for study of FSP & material dynamics – heating, solvents, azeotropes, critical-point, high-pressure

  7. Supercritical CO2 water extraction Theory: Physical-chemical interaction of cell water and carbon dioxide according to Henry’s Law, the Le Chatelier Principle and the Phase Rule. Variables:P, T, phase (gas, liquid, supercritical) [CO2]  P, 1/T CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ + HCO3- H+ + CO32- F = C – P + 2

  8. The reactant’s properties Rel static permittivity Dipole moment D Enthalpy evap kJ/mol Entropy evap J/(mol·K) 1.60 ε0 at 0 °C, 50 B 80.36 ε0 at 20 °C 0 1.85 15.33 at –57.5°C 40.68 70.8 108.9

  9. Supercritical Fluids Phase-change driving chemical change

  10. Supercritical CO2 wood dewatering Comparison of oven-dried (105C) and SCCO2 dewatered radiata pine wood Fibre Saturation Point

  11. Dewatering & air-drying SCCO2 chemi-mechanical dewatering Wood specimen mc (%) Diffusion-evaporation drying FSP=28% Dewatering & drying sequence

  12. Practical specimen preparation 5 SCCO2 – gaseous CO2 sequences Wood specimen mc (%) Preparation time (min)

  13. 1H NMR imaging of SCCO2 dewatering

  14. 15968 SCCO2 dewatering Preparation of wood specimen with uniform mc distribution approaching FSP Re-wetting? Further drying? 402

  15. Solid State 13C NMR Spectrum Pinus radiata wood at 12% mc Hemicellulose Cellulose Lignin

  16. T1(H) Nutation-Diffusion NMR Lignin Cellulose Hemicellulose Lignin T1(H) (ms)

  17. Water in cell wall at FSP NMR evidence of a water layer between the cellulose aggregate -phase and the matrix in the supramolecular nanocomposite of green wood. Stamm’s ‘solid-solution’ ?

  18. SCCO2 dewatering process - summary • Reaction of lumen water with SCCO2 with reversal of chemistry in gas phase • Bound water bond strength higher than enthalpy of SCCO2 reaction – no change • Wood material derived approaching FSP from green • Material suitable for wood-water dynamics & cell wall studies – Green to FSP & below

  19. Acknowledgements • Hank Kroese, Suzanne Gallagher, Bernard Dawson & Meeta Patel • FRST – ‘Wood Products for the Future’ Contract C04X0205

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