Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins

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Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins. / Ghorbani, Masoumeh; Konnerth, Johannes; Budjav, Enkhjargal et al.
in: Polymers, Jahrgang 9.2017, Nr. 2, 43, 28.01.2017.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

Harvard

Ghorbani, M, Konnerth, J, Budjav, E, Requejo Silva, A, Zinovyev, G, van Herwijnen, HWG, Edler, M, Grießer, T & Liebner, F 2017, 'Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins', Polymers, Jg. 9.2017, Nr. 2, 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym9020043

APA

Ghorbani, M., Konnerth, J., Budjav, E., Requejo Silva, A., Zinovyev, G., van Herwijnen, H. W. G., Edler, M., Grießer, T., & Liebner, F. (2017). Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins. Polymers, 9.2017(2), Artikel 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym9020043

Vancouver

Ghorbani M, Konnerth J, Budjav E, Requejo Silva A, Zinovyev G, van Herwijnen HWG et al. Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins. Polymers. 2017 Jan 28;9.2017(2):43. doi: 10.3390/polym9020043

Author

Ghorbani, Masoumeh ; Konnerth, Johannes ; Budjav, Enkhjargal et al. / Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins. in: Polymers. 2017 ; Jahrgang 9.2017, Nr. 2.

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@article{1ece957421f04c219f4f93641d378592,
title = "Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins",
abstract = "Ammoxidation of pine kraft lignin in aqueous 5 wt % ammonia affords a novel type of phenol substitute that significantly accelerates resole synthesis and curing as demonstrated for 40 wt % phenol replacement. Compared to non-ammoxidized lignin, which already shortens significantly the cooking time required to reach a resole viscosity of 1000 Pa·s (250 vs. 150 s) and reduces the typical curing B-time by about 25% at 100 °C, the use of ammoxidized lignin has an even more pronounced impact in this respect. Activation of lignin by Fenton-type oxidation prior to ammoxidation further boosts both synthesis and curing of the resole. This is presumably due to the intermediary formation of polyvalent cross-linkers like N,N,N-tris (methylol) trimethylene triamine triggered by saponification of a larger fraction of nitrogenous moieties present in such a treated lignin (ammonium salts, amide-type nitrogen, urea) and reaction of the released ammonia with formaldehyde. Except for the fact that phenol replacement by ammoxidized lignin results in a somewhat less brittle cured adhesive polymer and higher elastic modulus, the aforementioned acceleration in curing could no longer be observed in the presence of wood, where a significantly delayed wood-adhesive bond formation was observed for the lignin-containing adhesives as evident from the automated bonding evaluation system.",
author = "Masoumeh Ghorbani and Johannes Konnerth and Enkhjargal Budjav and {Requejo Silva}, Ana and Grigory Zinovyev and {van Herwijnen}, {Hendrikus W. G.} and Matthias Edler and Thomas Grie{\ss}er and Falk Liebner",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "28",
doi = "10.3390/polym9020043",
language = "English",
volume = "9.2017",
journal = "Polymers",
issn = "2073-4360",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "2",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ammoxidized Fenton-Activated Pine Kraft Lignin Accelerates Synthesis and Curing of Resole Resins

AU - Ghorbani, Masoumeh

AU - Konnerth, Johannes

AU - Budjav, Enkhjargal

AU - Requejo Silva, Ana

AU - Zinovyev, Grigory

AU - van Herwijnen, Hendrikus W. G.

AU - Edler, Matthias

AU - Grießer, Thomas

AU - Liebner, Falk

PY - 2017/1/28

Y1 - 2017/1/28

N2 - Ammoxidation of pine kraft lignin in aqueous 5 wt % ammonia affords a novel type of phenol substitute that significantly accelerates resole synthesis and curing as demonstrated for 40 wt % phenol replacement. Compared to non-ammoxidized lignin, which already shortens significantly the cooking time required to reach a resole viscosity of 1000 Pa·s (250 vs. 150 s) and reduces the typical curing B-time by about 25% at 100 °C, the use of ammoxidized lignin has an even more pronounced impact in this respect. Activation of lignin by Fenton-type oxidation prior to ammoxidation further boosts both synthesis and curing of the resole. This is presumably due to the intermediary formation of polyvalent cross-linkers like N,N,N-tris (methylol) trimethylene triamine triggered by saponification of a larger fraction of nitrogenous moieties present in such a treated lignin (ammonium salts, amide-type nitrogen, urea) and reaction of the released ammonia with formaldehyde. Except for the fact that phenol replacement by ammoxidized lignin results in a somewhat less brittle cured adhesive polymer and higher elastic modulus, the aforementioned acceleration in curing could no longer be observed in the presence of wood, where a significantly delayed wood-adhesive bond formation was observed for the lignin-containing adhesives as evident from the automated bonding evaluation system.

AB - Ammoxidation of pine kraft lignin in aqueous 5 wt % ammonia affords a novel type of phenol substitute that significantly accelerates resole synthesis and curing as demonstrated for 40 wt % phenol replacement. Compared to non-ammoxidized lignin, which already shortens significantly the cooking time required to reach a resole viscosity of 1000 Pa·s (250 vs. 150 s) and reduces the typical curing B-time by about 25% at 100 °C, the use of ammoxidized lignin has an even more pronounced impact in this respect. Activation of lignin by Fenton-type oxidation prior to ammoxidation further boosts both synthesis and curing of the resole. This is presumably due to the intermediary formation of polyvalent cross-linkers like N,N,N-tris (methylol) trimethylene triamine triggered by saponification of a larger fraction of nitrogenous moieties present in such a treated lignin (ammonium salts, amide-type nitrogen, urea) and reaction of the released ammonia with formaldehyde. Except for the fact that phenol replacement by ammoxidized lignin results in a somewhat less brittle cured adhesive polymer and higher elastic modulus, the aforementioned acceleration in curing could no longer be observed in the presence of wood, where a significantly delayed wood-adhesive bond formation was observed for the lignin-containing adhesives as evident from the automated bonding evaluation system.

U2 - 10.3390/polym9020043

DO - 10.3390/polym9020043

M3 - Article

VL - 9.2017

JO - Polymers

JF - Polymers

SN - 2073-4360

IS - 2

M1 - 43

ER -