Paper gets tough: An entangled film of 10-to-40-nanometer-thick cellulose fibers makes strong, tough nanopaper that could be used in medical implants and vehicle parts. A cross section of a fracture surface in the paper shows layers of cellulose fibers.
American Chemical Society

Communications

Paper Gets a Nano Makeover

Cellulose nanofibers from wood pulp create a superstrong paper.

  • Monday, June 16, 2008
  • By Prachi Patel

By splitting up wood pulp into cellulose nanofibers and rearranging the fibers into an entangled porous mesh, researchers have made a nanopaper that is stronger than cast iron and tougher than bone. The nanopaper is seven times stronger and two to three times as stretchy as conventional paper. It could be used to make tough packaging material, filters, membranes, and even car and aircraft parts. "Wood pulp is widely available, and there is the potential to produce nanofibers in very large quantities," says Lars Berglund, a biocomposites researcher at the Royal Institute of Technology, in Stockholm, Sweden, and coauthor of a paper in Biomacromolecules that describes the new material.

Cellulose, a stiff chain of glucose units, is one of the most abundant natural polymers: it makes up 90 percent of cotton and half of wood. Plant cell walls are made of multiple strands of cellulose bound into fibers typically 5 to 10 nanometers thick. To make regular paper, wood chips are heated with chemicals or mechanical force to create pulp. Aggregated, 30-micrometer-thick bundles of cellulose fibers in the pulp are then intertwined to create sheets.

The new nanopaper is made of much thinner 10-to-40-nanometer-thick fibers. Individual cellulose strands are very robust, Berglund says. "They have properties similar to Kevlar," he notes. The hydroxyl groups and oxygen molecules on individual nanofibers attach to each other strongly. Even if a sudden impact ruptures the bonds between some of the nanofibers, the defect is small enough that the entire material does not fail. The paper can withstand nearly two-thirds more force than cast iron before it breaks.

The stretchiness comes from the pores in the mesh of nanofibers. When the nanopaper is stretched, there is enough space for the fibers to slip against each other. "You can stretch it up to 10 percent before it fails," Berglund says. "Conventional paper can stretch a maximum of 3 to 4 percent, then it breaks."

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To make the nanopaper, Berglund and his colleagues first expose wood pulp to enzymes and mechanical force. This separates the pulp into cellulose microfibers. The pulp is passed through a device that uses high-pressure and high velocities in tiny microfluidic channels to create a uniform suspension of nanofibers in water. Finally, the researchers pass the suspension through a filter to create a gel, which they compress to make 100-micrometer-thick sheets.

Berglund says that the dilute, uniform suspension of the nanofibers is critical. It distributes the fibers homogeneously in the paper, making it strong. The porosity of the paper is also crucial. The researchers found that higher porosities led to paper that is stronger--that is, it handles more load per unit area--and tougher, which means that it does not crack easily.

The Swedish work is part of the broader interest in making polymers infused with nanomaterials, such as clay nanoparticles, carbon nanotubes, or graphene, in lieu of using traditional fillers such as glass fibers and carbon black. Compared with carbon nanotubes, cellulose is low cost and abundant. "Cellulose is a fantastic filler because it's a renewable resource," says Chris Weder, a professor of macromolecular science and engineering at Case Western Reserve University. "I think it's a fantastic way to tailor properties of material by way of making nanocomposites."

Weder says that the researchers will have to test how the nanopaper holds up when wet. He thinks that the mechanical properties of the material might degrade in the presence of water. However, he believes that the new work fills an important knowledge gap. "If you want to understand how nanocomposites behave mechanically, it is helpful to understand how a material formed by the nanofibers themselves would behave."


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tate0774

4 Comments

  • 1339 Days Ago
  • 06/16/2008

Typo

Kevlar, not Kelvar.
Believe or not, also we Finns are in the nanofiber era.

Taisto Leinonen
Helsinki, Finland

Reply

Brittany Sauser

46 Comments

  • 1339 Days Ago
  • 06/16/2008

Re: Typo

Thank you for catching this typo. It has been fixed.

Reply

dtutelman

117 Comments

  • 1339 Days Ago
  • 06/16/2008

Variations

It would be interesting to see how cellulose nanofibers compare with carbon nanotubes in resin-based composites (as opposed to the potentially water-weakening paper described in the article).

Just speculating here, but even if it were weaker than nanotube-resin composites, it might be stronger than ordinary carbon-fiber-resin composites. And, as long as it is stronger than glass-resin composite (fiberglass) it could still be a contender for a large market. An obvious advantage is the renewable resource angle, compared with carbon fibers or nanotubes. A possible additional advantage might accrue if carbon nanotubes do prove to be asbestos-like in toxicity but cellulose nanofibers do not.

As I said, just speculating. And it isn't at the top of the researchers' list, if I read the article correctly.

DaveT

Reply

DJTal

154 Comments

  • 1339 Days Ago
  • 06/16/2008

Building materials

I wonder if this fibre can be used to make concrete stronger in the same way that cooked starch does . Or perhaps these fibres can be carbonised or torrefied to make them hydophobic .

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dickcaro

8 Comments

  • 1339 Days Ago
  • 06/16/2008

Similar to Viscose Rayon process

I wonder if the process used to produce Viscose Rayon can be modified to produce nano-cellulose in commercial quantities?

See this website: http://www.mindfully.org/Plastic/Cellulose/Rayon-Fiber.htm

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truth angler

1 Comment

  • 491 Days Ago
  • 10/12/2010

Re: Similar to Viscose Rayon process

As the inventor of Nanocellulose/Microfibrillar Cellulose (MFC)
by the use of a Gaulin type milk homogenizer to convert cellulose pulp to nano size MFC it would not be a step forward to use the polluting viscose process for make nanocellulose when such a clean process is available. the use of MFC/Nano fibers to improve many products was first disclosed i patents issued to ITT Rayonier in 1982-84. The nano/MFC technology is now commercial in foods, cosmetics, paints, etc.

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