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Published in: Cellulose 4/2015

01-08-2015 | Original Paper

Hydrophobic cellulose: a material that expands upon drying

Authors: Wei Chung Chen, Alvaro Tejado, Md Nur Alam, Theo G. M. van de Ven

Published in: Cellulose | Issue 4/2015

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Abstract

A chemically modified hydrophobic cellulose material was wetted by force in vacuo and allowed to dry under ambient conditions. Most known materials shrink upon drying and swell upon wetting, a phenomenon known as dry-shrinkage; and thus are characterized by a dry-shrinkage coefficient either equal or greater than zero. Different from conventional materials, sheets of hydrophobic cellulose fibres expand upon drying, which implies that they exhibit dry-expansion. This property is calculated as a negative dry-shrinkage coefficient. We are unaware of any other material with this property. Such sheets can expand to over 500 % in thickness upon drying in the first cycle of use. This property degrades with each cycle because more hydrophilic areas come in contact with water as a result of mechanical damage to the material, thus making the sheets less hydrophobic. With increasing solid content, a decrease in tensile strength is observed, which is opposite to the conventional trend in wet web strength. A mechanism for the dry-expansion of this material is being proposed.

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Metadata
Title
Hydrophobic cellulose: a material that expands upon drying
Authors
Wei Chung Chen
Alvaro Tejado
Md Nur Alam
Theo G. M. van de Ven
Publication date
01-08-2015
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Cellulose / Issue 4/2015
Print ISSN: 0969-0239
Electronic ISSN: 1572-882X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-015-0645-8

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