Reversible swelling and collapsing the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous or nonporous biopolymeric structures

20250084575 ยท 2025-03-13

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of sequential solvent treatment to i) regenerate mesoporous biopolymeric structures, comprising the steps of providing a nonporous natural fiber welded biopolymer composite, submerging the nonporous composite in polar solvent, exchanging submersion solvents, typically starting from a solvent of polar identity and ending with a solvent of nonpolar identity, then removing the solvent; and ii) regenerate nonporous biopolymeric structures, comprising the steps of providing a mesoporous natural fiber welded biopolymer composite, submerging the mesoporous composite in polar solvent, then removing the solvent. A mesoporous biopolymeric structure wherein the NFW nonporous composite expresses a BET surface area change of <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 to >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1. A nonporous biopolymeric structure wherein the NFW mesoporous composite expresses a BET surface area change of >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 to <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1.

Claims

1. A method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of sequential solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous biopolymeric structures from nonporous or low porosity fiber welded materials, comprising the steps of: providing a nonporous or low porosity natural fiber welded biocomposite; submerging the nonporous or low porosity natural fiber welded biocomposite in a polar solvent having a dielectric constant 20; and forming a mesoporous biopolymer composite.

2. The method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of sequential solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous biopolymeric structures from nonporous or low porosity fiber welded materials of claim 1 further comprising the step of: exchanging the polar solvent starting from a solvent of polar identity and ending with a solvent of nonpolar identity having a dielectric constant <5.

3. The method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of sequential solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous biopolymeric structures of claim 2 further comprising the step of: removing the nonpolar solvent from the mesoporous biopolymer composite.

4. The method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of sequential solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous biopolymeric structures of claim 3 wherein the nonporous or low porosity natural fiber welded biocomposite expresses a Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area of <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 prior to the step of submerging the nonporous or low porosity natural fiber welded biocomposite in polar solvent and expresses a BET surface area of >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 after the step of removing the nonpolar solvent from the mesoporous biopolymer composite.

5. A method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of polar solvent treatment to regenerate nonporous biopolymeric structures from a higher surface area fiber welded material, comprising the steps of: providing a natural fiber welded mesoporous composite; submerging the mesoporous composite in a polar solvent; forming a nonporous biopolymer composite; and removing the polar solvent from the nonporous biopolymer composite.

6. The method of reversible swelling and collapsing of the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of polar solvent treatment to regenerate nonporous biopolymeric structures of claim 5 wherein the natural fiber welded mesoporous composite expresses a BET surface area of >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 prior to the step of submerging the mesoporous composite in polar solvent and expresses a BET surface area of <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 after the step of removing the polar solvent from the nonporous biopolymer composite.

7. A mesoporous biopolymeric structure made from the steps of: providing a natural fiber welded nonporous composite; submerging the natural fiber welded nonporous composite in a polar solvent; forming a mesoporous biopolymeric structure; and exchanging the solvent, starting from a solvent of polar identity and ending with a solvent of nonpolar identity.

8. The mesoporous biopolymeric structure of claim 7 further comprising the step of: removing the nonpolar solvent from the mesoporous biopolymeric structure.

9. The mesoporous biopolymeric structure of claim 8 wherein the natural fiber welded nonporous composite expresses a BET surface area of <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 prior to the step of submerging the natural fiber welded nanoporous composite in polar solvent and expresses a BET surface area of >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 after the step of removing the solvent from the mesoporous biopolymeric structure.

10. A nonporous biopolymeric structure made from the steps of: providing a natural fiber welded mesoporous composite; submerging the natural fiber welded mesoporous composite in a polar solvent; forming a nonporous biopolymeric structure; and removing the polar solvent from the nonporous biopolymeric structure.

11. The nonporous biopolymeric structure of claim 10 wherein the natural fiber welded mesoporous composite expresses a BET surface area of >40 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 prior to the step of submerging the natural fiber welded mesoporous composite in polar solvent and expresses a BET surface area of <5 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 after the step of removing the polar solvent from the nonporous biopolymeric composite.

Description

DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0016] The following description and drawings set forth certain illustrative implementations of the disclosure in detail, which are indicative of several exemplary ways in which the various principles of the disclosure may be carried out. The illustrated examples, however, are not exhaustive of the many possible embodiments of the disclosure. Other objects, advantages, and novel features of the disclosure will be set forth in the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the drawings.

[0017] FIG. 1 illustrates a bar chart comparing the BET surface areas of fiber welded cotton threads when using various designated starting solvents and carrying through the gamut of solvents. Note that water, methanol (MeOH), and ethanol (EtOH) were exchanged for isopropanol (IPA), 2-butanone (2B), and cyclohexane (CH) whereas all others were exchanged for 2B-CH). FIG. 1 illustrates pore size distributions and average pore diameters for regenerations using MeOH, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), or water (H.sub.2O) as the starting solvent. FIG. 1 also illustrates the isothermal N.sub.2 (for MeOH, DMSO, and H.sub.2O starting solvents) or Kr physisorption profiles for all BET analyses.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0018] This disclosure teaches methods and devices for reversible swelling and collapsing the latent pores of natural fiber welded biopolymer by way of solvent treatment to regenerate mesoporous or nonporous biopolymeric structures.

[0019] A novel product is described herein concerning mesoporous biopolymeric structures.

[0020] Herein, we demonstrate a solution to these long-standing problems.

[0021] We demonstrate a procedure for converting nonporous fiber welded biopolymers into mesoporous xerogel composites.

[0022] The fiber welding process is shown to establish an intrinsic latent porous network which is accessible as a xerogel when drying from nonpolar solvents. We exploit this property by rinsing nonporous or low-porosity fiber welded biopolymer materials with water, then performing a solvent exchange to cyclohexane using the gamut of solvents as described below.

[0023] Removing solvent from this state, even when the starting material was originally observed as nonporous, results in a porous network and creates a useable xerogel.

[0024] Similarly, a mesoporous fiber welded composite can be treated with a polar solvent, then the solvent removed to result in a nonporous material.

[0025] Commercially, this process allows for long-term storage and regeneration of fiber welded materials that were previously thought to be at end-of-life, thus solving long-standing problems.

Regeneration of Nonporous Cellulosic Material

Example 1

[0026] Any fiber welded biopolymer will benefit from this technique.

[0027] For cellulosic materials derived from cotton, fiber welding was performed using 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate (EMImAc) at 60 C. for 60 min. The weld time and temperature can be varied to increase or decrease the thickness of the amorphous layer. Initial rinses with water to remove the EMImAc, and subsequent drying in a 60 C. oven, creates a nonporous composite with a Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface area of ca. 0.01 m.sup.2 g.sup.1.

[0028] This is the starting material for demonstrating the regeneration technique.

Example 2

[0029] A 50 mg cutting of this composite was submerged in 50 mL of water for 24 h. Water is a known plasticizer for cellulose, and there is swelling of the porous structure. The hydrated material was then transferred, sequentially, to 50 mL of IPA, 50 mL of 2B, and 50 mL of CH, with residence times of 24 h per solvent (i.e., the gamut of solvents: H.sub.2O-IPA-2B-CH).

[0030] Upon drying from CH, the composite expresses a much higher BET surface area of ca. 110 m.sup.2 g.sup.1, a remarkable increase of over four orders of magnitude.

[0031] To reiterate, this process successfully converts a nonporous piece of fiber welded cloth into a mesoporous xerogel, something which has not been demonstrated to date.

Example 3

[0032] To expand this process and probe solvent interactions, the starting solvent was changed to MeOH, EtOH, acetone (C.sub.3H.sub.6O), acetonitrile (ACN), chloroform (CHCl.sub.3), or DMSO. Notably, we avoid regression to more interacting solvents (in this case, stronger hydrogen bonding solvents) by modifying the gamut for non-alcohols to just include the starting solvent, 2B, and CH (e.g., MeOH-IPA-2B-CH versus ACN-2B-CH). Of these, the only starting solvent to achieve a surface area comparable to water was dimethyl sulfoxide (107 m.sup.2 g.sup.1), with MeOH achieving only 42 m.sup.2 g.sup.1 and all others achieving less than 1 m.sup.2 g.sup.1. We demonstrated a correlation between ability to accept hydrogen bonds and swelling capability. Other solvent properties at play may include solvent molecule volume, polarizability, and dielectric constant.

Example 4

[0033] In addition to the above, a piece of mesoporous cotton xerogel was exposed to water and dried, resulting in a nonporous material. Subsequent treatment as per the above method successfully regenerated the material to a xerogel, indicating reversibility.

Example 5

[0034] Further, an aged piece of nonporous fiber welded lignocellulose (i.e., linen thread) was also successfully converted into a xerogel using the gamut of solvents technique, providing for storage and subsequent regeneration of nonporous products into xerogels at will.

[0035] The gamut of solvents treatment is not necessarily limited to the water-IPA-2B-CH sequence, but includes any other starting, intermediate, and finishing solvents and sequences thereof.

[0036] The gamut of solvents concept, as used to regenerate fiber welded materials, has also been proven effective with (but is not limited to) DMSO and MeOH.

[0037] Finishing solvents can provide tunability in the overall BET surface area by controllably closing pores.

[0038] Intermediate solvents can vary based on the two terminal solvents and primarily exist to bridge the polarity gap between the starting and finishing solvent. The gamut of solvents may or may not include intermediate solvents.

[0039] The application of the gamut of solvents to fiber welded biopolymer composite does not require the composite to be nonporous, and will regenerate a lower surface area xerogel to a higher surface area xerogel.

Advantages and New Features

[0040] 1) Our disclosure demonstrates the capability to regenerate and recycle/upcycle nonporous fiber welded biopolymer composites into aerogels/xerogels and vice versa. [0041] 2) This discloses that a gamut of solvents is an efficient and adaptable method for accessing pores intrinsic to, but not realized within, nonporous fiber welded biopolymer composites. [0042] 3) Our disclosure enables product storage and regeneration for nonporous fiber welded materials, including treatment and care instructions for commercialized products.

[0043] The above examples are merely illustrative of several possible embodiments of various aspects of the present disclosure, wherein equivalent alterations and/or modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon reading and understanding this specification and the annexed drawings. In addition, although a particular feature of the disclosure may have been illustrated and/or described with respect to only one of several implementations, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application. Also, to the extent that the terms including, includes, having, has, with, or variants thereof are used in the detailed description and/or in the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term comprising.