Litcius/Paper detail

Fully Biobased Adhesive from Glucose and Citric Acid for Plywood with High Performance

Chunyin Li, Hong Lei, Zhigang Wu, Xuedong Xi, Guanben Du, A. Pizzi

2022ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces108 citationsDOI

Abstract

Biomass-based adhesives have attracted much attention due to their eco-friendly, sustainable characteristics compared to formaldehyde-based adhesives; however, their low bonding strength and water resistance restrict their application. Thus, developing a high-performance biomass-based adhesive with excellent bonding strength and water resistance is necessary. In this work, a fully biomass-based citric acid-glucose (CAG) adhesive was produced by the esterification reaction of glucose and citric acid, which was validated by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR), 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (13C NMR), and liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS). Furthermore, the properties of the CAG adhesive were tuned considering the effects of reaction time and molar ratio of citric acid/glucose (CA/G). It was revealed that increasing the molar ratio of CA/G is more advantageous to improve the shear strength and water resistance of plywood than the reaction time. The dry and wet strengths of plywood bonded by the CAG adhesive can reach the standard requirement (≥0.7 MPa) when the molar ratios of CA/G were more than 0.6 and the reaction time was 1 h. These results were better than those bonded by the urea-formaldehyde (UF) resin. Therefore, this green adhesive shows great potential to replace the existing industrial UF resin adhesives.

Topics & Concepts

AdhesiveCitric acidMaterials scienceFormaldehydeFourier transform infrared spectroscopyWater resistanceUrea-formaldehydeMolar massComposite materialBond strengthBiomass (ecology)Shear strength (soil)MolarNuclear chemistryChemical engineeringOrganic chemistryPolymerChemistrySoil waterDentistrySoil scienceEngineeringOceanographyLayer (electronics)Environmental scienceMedicineGeologyLignin and Wood Chemistrybiodegradable polymer synthesis and propertiesAdvanced Cellulose Research Studies