Back to Search
Start Over
Assessing cellulose micro/nanofibre morphology using a high throughput fibre analysis device to predict nanopaper performance.
- Source :
- Cellulose; Mar2022, Vol. 29 Issue 4, p2599-2616, 18p
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- Characterising cellulose nanofibre (CNF) morphology has been identified as a grand challenge for the nanocellulose research field. Direct techniques for CNF morphology characterisation exhibit various difficulties related to the material network structure and equipment cost, while indirect techniques that investigate fibre-light interaction, fibre-solvent interaction, fibre-fibre interaction, or specific fibre surface area involve relatively facile methods but may be more unreliable. Nanopaper mechanical testing is a prevalent metric for assessing fibre-fibre interaction, but is an off-line, time-consuming, and destructive methodology. In this study, an optical fibre morphology analyser (MorFi, Techpap) was employed as an on-line, high throughput, fast turnaround tool to assess micro/nanofibre pulp morphology and predict the properties of nanopaper material. Correlation analysis identified fibre content and fibre kink properties as most correlated with nanopaper strength and toughness, while fibre width and coarseness were most inversely correlated with nanopaper performance. Principal component analysis (PCA) was employed to visualise interdependent morphological and mechanical data. Subsequently, two data driven statistical models—multiple linear regression (MLR) and machine learning based support vector regression (SVR)—were established to predict nanopaper properties from fibre morphology data, with SVR generating a more accurate prediction across all nanopaper properties (NRMSE = 0.13–0.33) compared to the MLR model (NRMSE = 0.33–0.51). This study highlights that statistical methods are useful to disentangle and visualise interdependent morphological data from an on-line fibre analysis device, while regression models are also capable of predicting paper mechanical properties from CNF samples even though these devices do not operate at nanoscale resolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 09690239
- Volume :
- 29
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Cellulose
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 155683795
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-021-04405-5