Role of microfibril angle in molecular deformation of cellulose fibrils in Pinus massoniana compression wood and opposite wood studied by in-situ WAXS.

Carbohydr Polym

College of Material Engineering, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Minhou, Fuzhou 350108, PR China; National Forestry and Grassland Administration Key Laboratory of Plant Fiber Functional Materials, Fuzhou 350108, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: June 2024

Upon tensile stress, the spiral cellulose fibrils in wood cell walls rotate like springs with decreasing microfibril angle (MFA), and the cellulose molecules elongate in the chain direction. Compression wood with high MFA and opposite wood with low MFA were comparatively studied by in-situ tensile tests combined with synchrotron radiation WAXS in the present study. FTIR spectroscopy revealed that compression wood had a higher lignin content and fewer acetyl groups. For both types of wood, the lattice spacing d increased and the MFA decreased gradually with the increase of tensile stress. At stresses beyond the yield point, cellulose lattice strain depended linearly on macroscopic stress, while the MFA depended linearly on macroscopic strain. The deformation mechanisms of compression wood and opposite wood are not essentially different but differ in their deformation behavior. Specifically, the contribution ratio of lattice strain and cellulose fibril reorientation to macroscopic strain was 0.25 and 0.53 for compression wood, and 0.40 and 0.33 for opposite wood, respectively. Due to the geometric effects of MFA, a greater contribution of cellulose fibril reorientation to the macroscopic deformation was detected in compression wood than in opposite wood.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.carbpol.2024.122024DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

compression wood
24
opposite wood
20
wood
13
wood opposite
12
microfibril angle
8
cellulose fibrils
8
studied in-situ
8
tensile stress
8
lattice strain
8
depended linearly
8

Similar Publications

Melting Behavior of Compression Molded Poly(ester amide) from 2,5-Furandicarboxylic Acid.

Polymers (Basel)

December 2024

Department of Civil, Chemical, Environmental and Materials Engineering, University of Bologna, Via Terracini 28, 40131 Bologna, Italy.

PEA 46 is a biobased polymer with promising properties for sustainable packaging applications, which can be obtained via polymerization of a furan 2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2,5-FDCA) derivative and a diol monomer containing internal amide bonds (46 amido diol). In the literature, PEA 46 showed a complex series of thermal transitions during DSC scans. For this reason, in this initial exploratory study PEA 46 was subjected to compression molding and the melting behavior of film samples was investigated with parallel DSC and WAXS analyses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) materials of wind turbine blades can be recovered and recycled by crushing, thereby solving one of the most perplexing problems facing the wind energy sector. This process yields selectively crushed wind turbine blade (SCWTB), a novel waste that is almost exclusively composed of GFRP composite fibers that can be revalued in terms of their use as a raw material in concrete production. In this research, the fresh and mechanical performance of concrete made with 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mechanical Behavior of 3D-Printed Zig-Zag Honeycomb Structures Made of BASF Ultrafuse 316L.

Materials (Basel)

December 2024

Laboratory of Microstructure Studies and Mechanics of Materials (LEM3), Lorraine University, UMR CNRS 7239, 57078 Metz, France.

The aim of this study is to determine the mechanical behavior of 2D honeycomb cellular structures with deformation initiators subject to quasi-static compression testing. Two different loading directions were studied: in-plane (IP) and out-of-plane (OP). The deformation initiators sought to stabilize the mechanical response by decreasing the initial peak force in the case of OP loading.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this work was to synthesize polyurethane foams based on petrochemical polyols and biopolyols with specific apparent densities (40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 kg/m), test their properties, glycolyze them, and finally analyze each glycolyzed product. The petroleum-based foams, used as reference foams, and the bio-based foams underwent a series of standard tests to define their properties (the content of closed cells 20-95%, compressive strength 73-1323 kPa, thermal conductivity 24-42 mW/m∙K, brittleness 4.6-82.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bioinspired surface structures for added shear stabilization in suction discs.

Sci Rep

January 2025

John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Boston, MA, 02134, USA.

Many aquatic organisms utilize suction-based organs to adhere to diverse substrates in unpredictable environments. For multiple fish species, these adhesive discs include a softer disc margin consisting of surface structures called papillae, which stabilize and seal on variable substrates. The size, arrangement, and density of these papillae are quite diverse among different species, generating complex disc patterns produced by these structures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!