Chitin is a promising natural polymer with great potential as a biomedical, hygiene, absorbent, and food-packing material. Producing chitin multifilament and assembling them into textiles is an efficient way of preparing these materials, with wet-spinning a major method used to produce man-made fibers. Unfortunately, dissolving chitin, producing a stable and suitable chitin dope, and ensuring filament strength are the main obstacles to the production of chitin multifilament. Based on recent research into chitin dissolution, solution properties, and high-strength chitin-based materials, chitin multifilament wet-spinning is no longer only a hypothetical strategy. Here, a pilot-scale wet-spinning method is introduced that overcomes the abovementioned limitations. A stable chitin spinning dope is prepared by dissolution and aging in an aqueous KOH/urea solution. A chitin multifilament is prepared by wet-spinning using a pilot-scale wet-spinning apparatus and aqueous alcohol/salt coagulation. After deacetylation, the chitosan multifilament possesses a dense structure and low crystallinity, but excellent mechanical properties. The chitin/chitosan multifilaments exhibit excellent cytocompatibilities and have promising prospects in biomedical applications. The method developed in this work provides a new approach for the pilot-scale wet-spinning of chitin/chitosan multifilaments.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/marc.202100252 | DOI Listing |
Macromol Rapid Commun
August 2021
College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan, Hubei, 430072, P. R. China.
Chitin is a promising natural polymer with great potential as a biomedical, hygiene, absorbent, and food-packing material. Producing chitin multifilament and assembling them into textiles is an efficient way of preparing these materials, with wet-spinning a major method used to produce man-made fibers. Unfortunately, dissolving chitin, producing a stable and suitable chitin dope, and ensuring filament strength are the main obstacles to the production of chitin multifilament.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMembranes (Basel)
November 2018
Department of Chemical Engineering, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), 7491 Trondheim, Norway.
Industrial scale production of carbon membrane is very challenging due to expensive precursor materials and a multi-step process with several variables to deal with. The optimization of these variables is essential to gain a competent carbon membrane (CM) with high performance and good mechanical properties. In this paper, a pilot scale system is reported that was developed to produce CM from regenerated cellulose precursor with the annual production capacity 700 m² of CM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarbohydr Polym
February 2014
Sumed International (UK) Limited, Integrity House, Units 1-2 Graphite Way, Hadfield, Glossop, Derbyshire SK13 1QH, UK.
Fibres have been used extensively in wound dressing applications as they provide a high surface area for absorption, ease of fabrication and softness. It is common practice for commercial wound dressings to be produced from natural materials, such a marine polysaccharides, as they are predominantly biocompatible, non-toxic, and often display bioactive properties, such as inherent antimicrobial activity. In this study hydrolysed chitosans were utilised as a sole coagulant for the production of alginate-chitosan fibres via a one-step, direct wet-spinning extrusion process.
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