Abstract
To study the potential impacts of shear stress on cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs), a microcapillary rheometer was employed to repeatedly shear approximately 10 mL of 6 wt% aqueous CNC suspension at 25 °C and rates ranging from 1,000 s−1 to 501,000 s−1. A 9 wt% CNC suspension was also tested at 316,000 s−1 for comparison of concentration effects on the behavior of the suspensions. After monitoring viscosity for 25 steady shear measurements, the suspensions processed at 1,000 s−1 decreased in viscosity by approximately 20 %. Higher shear rates produced smaller changes in viscosity, while increasing the concentration produced higher general viscosities. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) probed physical changes between the neat and sheared CNC samples. AFM images showed up to a 24 % reduction in length after shearing, but an insignificant reduction in cross-section. XRD showed a slight increase in the ratio of amorphous to crystalline fractions of the CNCs. Additionally, conductometric titration showed insignificant differences between neat and sheared samples. These findings suggest that viscosity changes in CNC suspensions during steady shear flow arise from physical fracturing of the CNCs perpendicular to their length, and not significantly from chemical degradation or reduction in residual amorphous content.
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