Functional Materials from Paper Wastes: I. From Waste Newsprint Paper and Cardboard to High-Grade Cellulose Fibers1
A. M. Mikhailidia, 1, Sh. Karim Saurovb, V. I. Markinc, and N. E. Kotelnikovad
aSt. Petersburg State University of Industrial Technologies and Design, St. Petersburg, 191186 Russia
bDepartment of Physics, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, FI-00014 Finland
cAltai State University, Barnaul, 656049 Russia
dInstitute of Macromolecular Compounds, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, 199004 Russia
1Corresponding author: e-mail: amikhailidi@yahoo.com.
Received 10 January, 2018
Abstract—Utilization of paper wastes as renewable resource of lignocellulosic constituents has the opportunity to promote a cleaner environment and to prepare valuable materials. This paper describes our study on an isolation of low-fiber powder cellulose from two grades of wastes as feedstocks: waste newsprint paper and cardboard wrapper through recycling including a thermal defibration, an alkali treatment with a solution of NaOH with a concentration from 0.03 to 1.00 М, bleaching with a solution of Н2О2 with a concentration from 0.8 to 2.6 М followed with an acid hydrolysis of the pretreated species with a solution of HNO3 of 1.5 and 3.0 M. The impact of the pretreatment on sizes of fibers was evaluated with stereoscopic microscopy. The powder celluloses obtained as a result of the acid hydrolysis exhibited the structure of cellulose I revealed with a WAXS method and were of a high-grade purity, according to EDXA. Sorption capacities of the powder celluloses from the waste cardboard and newsprint towards a dye methylene blue were 6.67 and 8.75 mg g–1, respectively.
Keywords: paper wastes, newsprint paper, cardboard, defibration, acid hydrolysis, powder cellulose
DOI: 10.1134/S1068162019070069