The invention relates to the partial dissolution of natural fibers for the purposes of structural and chemical modifications.
Synthetic polymers such as polystyrene are routinely welded using solvents such as dichloromethane. Natural fiber welding is a process by which biopolymer fibers are fused in a manner roughly analogous to traditional plastic welding. Prior to the discovery that ionic liquids (i.e., 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate) can dissolve biopolymers (i.e., cellulose and silk) without derivatization, there were no analogous solvents for natural materials. In addition to the utilization of an ionic liquid, control over the presence and amount of molecular additives (i.e., water, methanol, et cetera) is essential to controlling solvent efficacy. The demonstration of process control by careful manipulation of molecular additives is a fundamental feature that sets this invention apart from previous work. (Previous disclosures and patents exclusively invoke the utilization of neat or “pure” ionic liquids and do not recognize the vital importance of molecular additive control.)
There are many examples in both literature and patents of biopolymer solutions that are cast into molds to create a desired shape. In all of these cases, the biopolymer is completely dissolved so that the original structure is fully disrupted. With fiber welding, the fiber interior is intentionally left in its native state. This is potentially advantageous because the final structure retains some of the original material properties and is significant for creating materials from biopolymers such as silk and cellulose.
Traditional methods of cast molding biopolymer solutions are also disadvantaged in that there is a physical limit to how much polymer can be dissolved in solution. Typically, solutions that are 10% by mass biopolymer (90% by mass ionic liquid solvent) are generally quite viscous and difficult to handle, even at elevated temperatures. The fiber welding process allows (dry) fiber bundles to be manipulated into the desired shape before welding commences. The use and handling of native fibers often grants control over the engineering of the final product that is not possible for solution based technologies.
The invention is a process by which individual natural fibers such as cellulose, chitin, chitosan, collagen, hemicellulose, lignin, silk, et cetera, are swollen by an appropriate ionic liquid-based solvent system, and then reconstituted to form a congealed network. A cartoon of the fiber welding process is shown in
Natural fiber welding is a processing technique by which natural fibers are swollen by an appropriate ionic liquid-based solvent system for the purpose of subsequent physical or chemical manipulation. The solvent system must be capable of interrupting intermolecular bonding (at least partially) to open and mobilize (solvate) the polymer for modification. Molecular additives such as water, methanol, et cetera are meticulously controlled to modify the solvent efficacy. Additionally, the amount of solvent (relative to polymer) is often intentionally kept low to limit the degree to which materials are modified. The ionic liquid-based solvent may be removed either by a second solvent system or by evaporation if the welding solvent is sufficiently volatile. (The evaporation rate may be increased significantly by placing the sample under vacuum.)
As used herein the term “ionic liquid” refers to a liquid that is comprised of anions and cations. Ionic liquids are attractive solvents as they are non-volatile, non-flammable, have a high thermal stability, are relatively inexpensive to manufacture, are environmentally friendly, and can be used to provide greater control and flexibility in the overall processing methodology. Ionic liquids of interest exist as liquids well below room temperature up to a temperature as high as 200° C. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/326,678, filed on Dec. 29, 2005, and incorporated herein by reference, contains numerous examples of suitable ionic liquid solvents for use in the present invention. Preferably, the ionic liquid solvents have melting points below 150° C., more preferably, below about 100° C.
As used herein the term “ionic liquid-based solvent” refers to a liquid containing an ionic liquid mixed with at least one other molecular component. Molecular components can be solvents such as water, methanol, et cetera that can strongly interact with the cations and/or anions of the ionic liquid.
The method for natural fiber welding comprises partially dissolving either biopolymers or synthetic polymers with a molten ionic liquid-based solvent wherein said ionic liquid solvent component is comprised of cations and anions and has a melting point below 150° C. The ionic liquid-based solvents utilized contain molecular species that modify solvent efficacy (with respect to dissolution of polymers). Whereas previous work (patents) teach and detail the use of neat (pure) ionic liquids, the present disclosure details the utilization of systems that are ionic liquid(s) with at least one molecular component. The addition molecular components allow processing to be accomplished with much improved levels of control and are essential to the creation of advanced composite materials. Additionally, ionic liquids may be diluted by a molecular solvent (generally a non-solvent for the partially dissolved polymer materials) such that the partial dissolution process of the biopolymers or synthetic polymer materials commences upon removal of the diluent by heating or simple evaporation. The diluent may be a molecular solvent such as water, alcohols, or ketones (or mixture of these). The solvent system partially dissolves biopolymer or synthetic polymer materials to form a congealed network. Removal of the ionic liquid-based solvent is generally accomplished by combining the mixture with a large excess of non-solvent for the partially dissolved polymer materials that leeches the ionic liquid into a phase separate from the solidified materials. This washing method removes any excess ionic liquid-based solvents from the fiber surface as well as dialyzing away the solvent system from the congealed fiber network. Solvents used to remove the ionic liquid(s) from treated materials are generally similar to those previously mentioned as potential molecular diluents (i.e., water, methanol).
The fiber welding process facilitates the creation of functional structures from the controlled fusion of fibrous threads, woven materials, or fibrous mats. The physical and chemical properties of said materials are reproducibly manipulated by rigorous control of the amount of ionic liquid-based solvent applied, the duration of exposure to ionic liquid temperature, the temperature and pressure applied during the treatment. Materials may be joined to create laminate structures with proper control of process variables. The surface of these materials may be preferentially modified while leaving some of the material in the native state. Surface modifications my include manipulation of the material surface chemistry directly, or indirectly by the addition of particles to impart the desired physical or chemical properties.
An example of the fiber welding process is detailed in
1. Important Fiber Welding Variables
In addition to the choice of solvent and the type of material treated, three process variables principally determine the outcome of the welding process: time (of treatment), temperature (of treatment), and the concentration of solvent (ratio of solvent to treated material). The impact of each variable is described in the examples that follow.
1A. Treatment Time
1B. Treatment Temperature
In addition to treatment time, temperature is also extremely important in determining the extent to which fibers are modified during the welding process. X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) (
The model system studied was Regency 22 count cotton cloth processed with 1.3 g [EMI] [Ac]-based solvent (with additional water and acetic acid to control solvent system efficacy) applied per cm2 of cloth for five, ten, and thirty minutes at room temperature and 80° C., respectively. Note that the applied rate of ionic liquid is similar to the cotton cloth's density and that the cloth was stretched and pinned over a rigid polystyrene plate during processing to prevent significant contraction of treated samples. The ionic liquid-based solvent was removed by immersion in water. A small piece of cloth was also completely dissolved (in [EMI] [Ac]-based solvent) and then reconstituted in water for comparative purposes.
Powder XRD data (
Data from curves B and C can be fit using linear combinations of curves A and D to deduce the approximate amount of native cotton converted to amorphous cellulose (Table I). Fits from additional experiments similar to those just described (but with different treatment times) are presented in Table I below. Results underpin the conclusion that native material structure is lost with increasing treatment temperature and time. The tunable nature of the fiber welding process is also apparent from these results.
The modification comes to bear in tensile testing results (Table II). Cloth samples with 20.0 mm gauge lengths and 5.0 mm wide were subjected to tensile testing in two distinct orientations with respect to the aida-type weave. Stress was applied either in line with the aida weave (parallel and perpendicular to individual threads) or stress was applied at 45° with respect to the weave (45° with respect to all individual threads). Tensile testing results are reported in Table II below. Errors are the standard deviations and “n” is the number of individual samples tested for each sample type. Data are normalized by the cross sectional breaking point area.
When stress is applied in line with the aida weave, the cloth modulus increases by more than an order of magnitude for samples welded at 80° C., however, energy to break and maximum stress at break were not significantly modified for treated samples. Results may be explained by noting that load bearing threads failed at locations between thread intersections. As already shown in
When stress is applied at 45° with respect to the aida weave, results are significantly different for the modulus, maximum stress, and energy to break of treated versus untreated samples. The strength and toughness of samples treated at 80° C. are vastly superior to that of the other samples and can be rationalized by noting that this mode of testing probes the degree to which intersecting threads are fused. Due to the size of samples tested and the type of weave, threads did not run the entire gauge length of the sample. Untreated samples were therefore extremely weak because threads could easily slip past one another causing the structure to fail at low stress. Samples treated at 20° C. show roughly a two-fold improvement, but thread intersections still do not appear to be strongly fused. Samples treated at 80° C. show robust fusion between intersecting threads. The material strength is improved more than 200-fold over native samples. The strength of the welded intersections even approached that of samples in which the applied load was in line with the aida weave.
1C. Treatment Concentration
In previous examples, materials were treated with [EMI] [Ac] plus several parts per thousand (by mass) water, respectively. Solvent loadings (the ratio of the mass of [EMI] [Ac] to the mass of the material treated) were intentionally kept low to control the amount of welding. The amount of [EMI] [Ac]-based solvent applied to aida-type cotton cloth, for example, was not sufficient to completely dissolve the total amount of polymer present (even if the treatment time was much longer). However, it is often not possible to weld fibrous materials with neat [EMI] [Ac] due to limitations of viscosity and the strong dissolution properties of [EMI] [Ac]. For example, cotton balls are essentially a loose, random network of fine cellulose fibers. The viscosity of [EMI] [Ac] makes it difficult to realize a consistent solvent loading when treating this type of material. In addition, many fine fibers quickly dissolve (completely) even at room temperature when exposed to neat [EMI] [Ac]. (These problems also occur when working with loose silk.)
There are two ways to weld materials composed of fine fibers. One solution is to use an (unique) ionic liquid solvent that is a less capable of solubilizing the material of interest. This is generally an undesirable strategy because each unique material requires the development of a distinct ionic liquid solvent optimized for the desired amount of treatment. A more efficient strategy is to dilute a strong solvent such as [EMI] [Ac] with a molecular component such as methanol that strongly interacts with the ionic liquid. The dilution has two essential purposes. First, the dilution modifies solvent efficacy and prevents the ionic liquid from dissolving the material until the prescribed time (after the volatile solvent is removed). Second, the dilution allows precise control of the amount of ionic liquid introduced. For example, dilute [EMI] [Ac] in methanol solutions can be introduced to cotton balls with minimal perturbation to the native material structure. This is possible because methanol decreases the solution viscosity and lowers the solvating capabilities of [EMI] [Ac]. Methanol is then driven off with heat or by vacuum at a later time to commence the welding process.
2. Various Examples of Fiber Welding
Several examples follow that are embodiments of the invention where [EMI] [Ac] acts upon polymers such as cellulose and silk. The examples shown are not inclusive of all possible embodiments, but begin to map parameters of and possibilities for this invention.
3. Derivatization
In addition to consolidating individual fibers together, the fiber welding process permits the incorporation of a different material to the outside of natural fibers without significant change to the fiber interior. For example, nanoparticles such as carbon nanotubes or clays may be welded to the fiber surface,
The treated material shown in
Chemical derivatization is an important aspect of fiber welding that remains to be demonstrated. There is a good deal of literature pertaining to functionalizing cellulose to control hydrophilicity, biocompatibility, et cetera. These chemistries are typically attempted in (homogeneous) systems where cellulose is thoroughly dispersed and solubilzed. It is thought that the swelling and mobilization stage of the fiber welding process may allow, for example, a fiber to be modified with a hydrophobic sheath while maintaining the native, structurally integrous core.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States for all governmental purposes without the payment of any royalty.
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20080023162 | Myllymaki et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20090022775 | Champ et al. | Jan 2009 | A1 |
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WO 2007032022 | Mar 2007 | WO |
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