Cellulose
Cellulose is B,1-4 glycosidic linked glucoses most notably produced by plants as a structural material. Cellulose is useful to humans as a digestive and material fiber. Additionally cellulose can be extracted and polymerized with different functional groups as a bioplastic. Cellulose beta linkages are very stable and formed by plants to be very difficult to break, but the glucose monomers yield large amounts of energy once released. Waste biomass is largely cellulose and its companion polymers lignin and hemicellulose.
Sources of cellulose
Cellulose is one of the most abundant biomolecules on the planet and is produced in large quantities as a waste by agriculture. Agricultural waste at FeF could be refined for the cellulose and the characteristics of different biomass wastes need to be understood. Biomass waste from removal of high value products, such as sugar and lipids, may be a source that fits well with OSE product ecologies.
Bacterial Cellulose, as the name suggests is cellulose produced/grown by bacteria from a growing medium. It can be a useful material, and its derivation directly from bacteria cuts out the need to extract cellulose from other sources in what are fairly complicated processes (such as from wood or other plant matter).
Polycellulose
Cellulose acetate
Cellulose acetate is a polyester of glucose with acetate so as to replace the glucose's hydroxyl (OH) groups. Ideally all three hydroxyl groups (C2, C3, C6) are replaced with acetate resulting in cellulose triacetate. Cellulose acetate can be made by reacting cellulose biomass with acetic anhydride and an acid catalyst. Cellulose acetate has good optical and packaging characteristics but is not very durable.
Process for obtaining cellulose acetate from agricultural by-products by Biswas et al 2006 demonstrated yields of cellulose acetate from hemicellulose sugar depleted biomass. The study utilized a pretreatment to remove sugars and then an acetylation step followed by filtration to gather cellulose acetate. Feedstocks utilized were rice straw, wheat hull, and corn fibers and untreated and pretreated biomass were compared. The yield of the pretreated samples increase from 0.5, 1.8, 13.5% respectively to all around 25%. The value of cellulose acetate ~$2.00 is used to compare the cost of reagents. The pretreatment consists of milling followed by a hot hexane wash to remove oils. Corn fibers were then slurried 0.5% H2SO4 and pretreated in an autoclave at 121 C for 15 min, while rice hulls (15%, w/v) and wheat straw (8.6%, w/v) were slurried in 1% (v/v) H2SO4 separately and pretreated in an autoclave at 121 C for 1 h. Pretreated fibers were neutralized to pH 5.0 using 10 M NaOH. The solids were separated from the liquid, washed with water, and dried at 60 C for 24 hr for use in acetylation. Acetylation consisted of combining 2 grams of sample along with 0.5 g of acetic acid, 5.0 g of acetic anhydride, 30 ml of methylene chloride, and 0.04 g of sulfuric acid in a 100 ml round bottom flask. The mixture was heated to 80 C with stirring for 4 hr under a reflux condensor. The mixture was cooled and sieved through a #60 filter. The remaining cellulose acetate was recovered from the residue with 60 ml chloroform and stirred for 30 minutes. The sample was filtered through Tyler #60 filter and the filtrate combined with the first filtrate.
http://www.google.com/patents/US4162359
http://www.google.com/patents/US2129052