Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals

PLA was grafted onto starch nanoparticles using a novel synthetic strategy consisting of three reaction steps. The first step was aimed to protect the hydroxyl groups of PLA by benzoylation (PLABz), the second one involved the activation of carboxyl groups using thionyl chloride and the last reactio...

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Autores principales: García, N.L., Lamanna, M., D'Accorso, N., Dufresne, A., Aranguren, M., Goyanes, S.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01413910_v97_n10_p2021_Garcia
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spelling todo:paper_01413910_v97_n10_p2021_Garcia2023-10-03T14:58:35Z Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals García, N.L. Lamanna, M. D'Accorso, N. Dufresne, A. Aranguren, M. Goyanes, S. Chemically modified starch Nanocomposites Nanocrystals Poly (lactic acid) Benzoyl group Benzoylation Biodegradable material Carboxyl groups Chemically modified Degradation temperatures Grafting onto Hydroxyl groups Molecular mobility Packaging industry Physical mixtures Poly lactic acid Polymer chains Starch nanocrystals Starch nanoparticles Synthetic strategies Thermal behaviors Thionyl chlorides Three reaction steps Blending Chemical modification Chlorine compounds Degradation Lactic acid Nanocomposites Nanocrystals Nanoparticles Starch Grafting (chemical) PLA was grafted onto starch nanoparticles using a novel synthetic strategy consisting of three reaction steps. The first step was aimed to protect the hydroxyl groups of PLA by benzoylation (PLABz), the second one involved the activation of carboxyl groups using thionyl chloride and the last reaction was the grafting of the modified PLA onto the starch nanoparticles (PLASTARCH). The thermal behavior of the composite obtained by this method was very different from that displayed by the physical mixture of PLA and the starch nanoparticles (PLA-NC blend). The benzoylation step that leads to PLABz produces an increase of the molecular mobility, resulting in lower glass transition temperature, Tg, than that of the original PLA; a change that was observed in the DSC thermograms of the samples. On the other hand, the Tg of the PLASTARCH was similar to that of the PLA as a consequence of two opposite effects acting simultaneously: a free volume increase due to the presence of benzoyl groups and a confinement of the polymer chain, originating from the grafting onto NC. The material obtained by chemical modification (PLASTARCH) has a degradation temperature slightly lower than that of PLA, which does not affect its potential use in the packaging industry. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01413910_v97_n10_p2021_Garcia
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Chemically modified starch
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Poly (lactic acid)
Benzoyl group
Benzoylation
Biodegradable material
Carboxyl groups
Chemically modified
Degradation temperatures
Grafting onto
Hydroxyl groups
Molecular mobility
Packaging industry
Physical mixtures
Poly lactic acid
Polymer chains
Starch nanocrystals
Starch nanoparticles
Synthetic strategies
Thermal behaviors
Thionyl chlorides
Three reaction steps
Blending
Chemical modification
Chlorine compounds
Degradation
Lactic acid
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Nanoparticles
Starch
Grafting (chemical)
spellingShingle Chemically modified starch
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Poly (lactic acid)
Benzoyl group
Benzoylation
Biodegradable material
Carboxyl groups
Chemically modified
Degradation temperatures
Grafting onto
Hydroxyl groups
Molecular mobility
Packaging industry
Physical mixtures
Poly lactic acid
Polymer chains
Starch nanocrystals
Starch nanoparticles
Synthetic strategies
Thermal behaviors
Thionyl chlorides
Three reaction steps
Blending
Chemical modification
Chlorine compounds
Degradation
Lactic acid
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Nanoparticles
Starch
Grafting (chemical)
García, N.L.
Lamanna, M.
D'Accorso, N.
Dufresne, A.
Aranguren, M.
Goyanes, S.
Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
topic_facet Chemically modified starch
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Poly (lactic acid)
Benzoyl group
Benzoylation
Biodegradable material
Carboxyl groups
Chemically modified
Degradation temperatures
Grafting onto
Hydroxyl groups
Molecular mobility
Packaging industry
Physical mixtures
Poly lactic acid
Polymer chains
Starch nanocrystals
Starch nanoparticles
Synthetic strategies
Thermal behaviors
Thionyl chlorides
Three reaction steps
Blending
Chemical modification
Chlorine compounds
Degradation
Lactic acid
Nanocomposites
Nanocrystals
Nanoparticles
Starch
Grafting (chemical)
description PLA was grafted onto starch nanoparticles using a novel synthetic strategy consisting of three reaction steps. The first step was aimed to protect the hydroxyl groups of PLA by benzoylation (PLABz), the second one involved the activation of carboxyl groups using thionyl chloride and the last reaction was the grafting of the modified PLA onto the starch nanoparticles (PLASTARCH). The thermal behavior of the composite obtained by this method was very different from that displayed by the physical mixture of PLA and the starch nanoparticles (PLA-NC blend). The benzoylation step that leads to PLABz produces an increase of the molecular mobility, resulting in lower glass transition temperature, Tg, than that of the original PLA; a change that was observed in the DSC thermograms of the samples. On the other hand, the Tg of the PLASTARCH was similar to that of the PLA as a consequence of two opposite effects acting simultaneously: a free volume increase due to the presence of benzoyl groups and a confinement of the polymer chain, originating from the grafting onto NC. The material obtained by chemical modification (PLASTARCH) has a degradation temperature slightly lower than that of PLA, which does not affect its potential use in the packaging industry. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format JOUR
author García, N.L.
Lamanna, M.
D'Accorso, N.
Dufresne, A.
Aranguren, M.
Goyanes, S.
author_facet García, N.L.
Lamanna, M.
D'Accorso, N.
Dufresne, A.
Aranguren, M.
Goyanes, S.
author_sort García, N.L.
title Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
title_short Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
title_full Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
title_fullStr Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
title_full_unstemmed Biodegradable materials from grafting of modified PLA onto starch nanocrystals
title_sort biodegradable materials from grafting of modified pla onto starch nanocrystals
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_01413910_v97_n10_p2021_Garcia
work_keys_str_mv AT garcianl biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
AT lamannam biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
AT daccorson biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
AT dufresnea biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
AT arangurenm biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
AT goyaness biodegradablematerialsfromgraftingofmodifiedplaontostarchnanocrystals
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