Abstract
AbstractA new way of producing polycation‐grafted fibrous cellulose for its use as a retention aid in the papermaking process was conceived. It consists of adding, under intense stirring, to a cellulose fibers suspension at a basic pH a cationic polyacrylamide dissolved in water. As the cellulose fiber's surface is negatively charged because of its more or less acid groups, the cationic polymer adsorbs on it. The cationic‐grafted cellulose fibers are very similar to the cellulose fibers used in papermaking, since the polymer is (on a micrometer scale) homogeneously grafted on them as a film. It could so be used to increase the retention of the negatively charged fillers, fibers, and pigments during the process, without altering the properties of the resulting sheet of paper. The amount of polymeric grafts depends on the quantity of anionic groups on fiber's surface and varies monotonically with the grafting temperature and polyacrylamide's concentration in the blend. The grafted fibrous cellulose is well stable, even in drastic media and for lower Mw grafts, and the amount of grafted polymer also depends on the concentration and characteristics of fiber's suspension. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 102: 3149–3157, 2006
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