Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots

The isolation of cellulosic fibers and their applications in composite materials have drawn considerable interest due to their outstanding thermal and mechanical properties combined with light-weight character, biodegradability, and renewability. Bamboo is a fast-growing plant, and its properties in...

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Published in:BioResources
Main Author: Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: North Carolina State University 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137571790&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.17.3.4806-4815&partnerID=40&md5=ac13504f10ff0dedc1d51e73c791f912
id 2-s2.0-85137571790
spelling 2-s2.0-85137571790
Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
2022
BioResources
17
3
10.15376/biores.17.3.4806-4815
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137571790&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.17.3.4806-4815&partnerID=40&md5=ac13504f10ff0dedc1d51e73c791f912
The isolation of cellulosic fibers and their applications in composite materials have drawn considerable interest due to their outstanding thermal and mechanical properties combined with light-weight character, biodegradability, and renewability. Bamboo is a fast-growing plant, and its properties include sustainability and excellent tensile strength. In this study, bamboo fibers from the culms and shoots of Dendrocalamus asper were treated with 5 wt% sodium hydroxide and subjected to ultra-sonication for 5 hours to obtain bamboo cellulose. Infra-red spectra showed that lignin and hemicelluloses were removed after treatment. With the removal of amorphous cellulosic regions, both cellulosic fibers exhibited higher decomposition temperatures than the raw fibers. Thermogravimetric analysis confirmed that both types of bamboo cellulose had a peak decomposition temperature at 408. Cellulose isolated from the bamboo shoots exhibited similar chemical and thermal properties, indicating its huge potential as an alternative to mature bamboo culms. © 2022, North Carolina State University. All rights reserved.
North Carolina State University
19302126
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
spellingShingle Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
author_facet Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
author_sort Naim A.; Tan C.S.Y.; Liew F.K.
title Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
title_short Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
title_full Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
title_fullStr Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
title_full_unstemmed Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
title_sort Thermal Properties of Bamboo Cellulose Isolated from Bamboo Culms and Shoots
publishDate 2022
container_title BioResources
container_volume 17
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.15376/biores.17.3.4806-4815
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137571790&doi=10.15376%2fbiores.17.3.4806-4815&partnerID=40&md5=ac13504f10ff0dedc1d51e73c791f912
description The isolation of cellulosic fibers and their applications in composite materials have drawn considerable interest due to their outstanding thermal and mechanical properties combined with light-weight character, biodegradability, and renewability. Bamboo is a fast-growing plant, and its properties include sustainability and excellent tensile strength. In this study, bamboo fibers from the culms and shoots of Dendrocalamus asper were treated with 5 wt% sodium hydroxide and subjected to ultra-sonication for 5 hours to obtain bamboo cellulose. Infra-red spectra showed that lignin and hemicelluloses were removed after treatment. With the removal of amorphous cellulosic regions, both cellulosic fibers exhibited higher decomposition temperatures than the raw fibers. Thermogravimetric analysis confirmed that both types of bamboo cellulose had a peak decomposition temperature at 408. Cellulose isolated from the bamboo shoots exhibited similar chemical and thermal properties, indicating its huge potential as an alternative to mature bamboo culms. © 2022, North Carolina State University. All rights reserved.
publisher North Carolina State University
issn 19302126
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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