Self-crosslinking of 2-hydroxypropyl-N-methylmorpholinium chloride cellulose fibres
Journal article, 2011

Crosslinking of cellulose fibres was obtained by inducing a substitution reaction in a cationic cellulose ether (NMM-cellulose) prepared by action of N-oxiranylmethyl-N-methylmorpholinium chloride. During the reaction the N-methylmorpholine moiety of the cellulosic ether acts as a leaving group facilitating a covalent bond formation between the ether substituent and a hydroxyl or other nucleophilic group present in the cellulose chain. In order to provide additional evidence of the suggested crosslinking route and investigate its possibilities, different reaction conditions have been investigated and assessed in terms of the obtained fibre properties. The crosslinked fibres were characterized by means of elemental analysis and structure accessibility studies, including accessibility to water, anions and nitrogen gas. According to these investigations heating at 105 A degrees C induces a significant crosslinking. Pre-treatment with acetone restricts it mainly to formation of intra-fibre crosslinks, whereas heating from water suppresses the reactivity but results nevertheless in highly crosslinked structure with both intra- and inter-fibre crosslinks involved.

cotton cellulose

Crosslinking

Cellulose cationic ether

derivatives

N-oxiranylmethyl-N-methylmorpholinium chloride

multifunctional carboxylic-acids

hydrogels

wet performance

crosslinking

Fibre saturation point

Water retention value

sorption

agents

Author

Merima Hasani

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Organic Chemistry

Gunnar Westman

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Organic Chemistry

Cellulose

0969-0239 (ISSN)

Vol. 18 3 575-583

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Polymer Chemistry

DOI

10.1007/s10570-011-9531-1

More information

Created

10/8/2017