Kokouvi M.
Akato
ab,
Ngoc A.
Nguyen
c,
Kalavathy
Rajan
a,
David P.
Harper
a and
Amit K.
Naskar
*abc
aCenter for Renewable Carbon, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA. E-mail: naskarak@ornl.gov
bBredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA
cCarbon and Composites Group, Chemical Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
First published on 1st October 2019
In this report we describe repurposing of recycled polyesters as a matrix for lignin-a biorefinery coproduct that is used as a solid fuel and needs to find higher value-to make sustainable high-performance thermoplastic materials. Brittle lignin oligomers, isolated from plant biomass, require a low-melting host polymer matrix to form a rigid and tough renewable material. We demonstrate controlled lignin dispersion and interfacial interactions in softened recycled polyethylene terephthalate (PET) using a simple solvent-free, melt-blending technique. To avoid lignin degradation and devolatilization during melt processing, it was thermally treated. Tall oil fatty acid was used to enable PET processability at low enough temperature to accommodate lignin without charring. Chemical analysis reveals reduction of aliphatic hydroxyl content from 2 mmol g−1 to 1.63 mmol g−1 and an increase of total phenolic hydroxyl moieties from 5.86 to 6.64 mmol g−1 and cleavage of β-O-4 ether linkages due to thermal treatment. Structural transformation of lignin macromolecules during heat treatment was further confirmed by an increase in molar mass and improved thermal stability. Interfacial interactions between lignin and PET were assessed from mechanical properties and thermal analyses. Thermal treatment not only helps to improve the stability of lignin but also slightly reduces the size of the dispersed lignin domains via favored interfacial interactions with the PET matrix. These methods improve mechanical properties of the material. Further, incorporation of lignin in the plasticized PET matrix increases the ductility in the blended products. The method we discuss here utilizes industrial wastes and co-products, and it does not require solvent or toxic chemicals during the reactive extrusion process that yields complete conversion to products.
PET is a semi-crystalline thermoplastic polyester broadly used in packaging industries. Wastes generated during manufacturing and consumption of PET are detrimental to the environment because PET lacks biodegradability.3 Thus, recycling these wastes is desired for environmental protection, conservation of petrochemicals and energy, and to generate additional revenue streams. Currently, recycled waste PET is used in construction, packaging, and composite applications. For example, recycled PET is used readily in structural concrete reinforcement, where crack control and enhancement of ductility are valuable.4,5 Waste PET is also used to develop new materials through blending with other polymers.6–9 Most blends are immiscible at molecular levels due to unfavorable interfacial tension between the components and often require the addition of a compatibilizer.
Blends of PET and lignin were evaluated as an alternate route in the efforts of lignin valorization to derive thermoplastic/lignin alloys.10–16 Unfortunately, only moderate interactions between thermally degraded lignin and the PET matrix and a downward trend of the tensile strength as a function of the amount of lignin loading were observed. For example, a blend of PET and 30 wt% lignin-prepared in our laboratory at 260 °C-shows that the blend only retains less than 38% of tensile stress of waste PET and a significant decrease in elongation. Therefore, in most cases, lignin was modified to introduce functional moieties that favor strong interactions between the components. Adequately tailored interfacial interactions, either by chemical route or by addition of compatibilizer, drastically improve the dispersion of fine homogenous lignin domains that is valuable for performance enhancement of the blends. In that regard, esterification is often used as a lignin modification route.17,18 The additional step increases cost and creates a need for chemical disposal, which constitutes an inherent disadvantage for the new polyester-lignin blends for industrial adoption.
Most of the earlier reports on PET-lignin blends claim partial miscibility or total immiscibility between lignin and the host matrix with widespread variations in structures and properties based on microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and Fourier transformed infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Yet very little information is available on process engineering of the blends. Due to the high melting temperature (∼260 °C) of PET, choosing appropriate blending temperatures for PET/lignin blends is important to avoid lignin degradation during mechanical blending. Jeong et al.14 reported mixing temperature of 170 °C for blends of lignin and synthetic polymers including PET, which yielded heterogeneous blends of PET. Temperature setup as high as 265 °C were used elsewhere.10 In general, the rheology of the blend components impacts processing and phase behavior of the resulting PET/lignin blends.
The scope of this study lies within usage of melt-based blending techniques to develop partially renewable polymer blends of post-manufacturing PET waste and an organosolv lignin, a low-cost natural polymer obtained from biomass processing industries without chemical modification. In general, normal processing temperatures (265 °C to 280 °C) of post-manufacturing PET are deemed detrimental for nanoscale dispersion of lignin without thermal degradation of the lignin phase. For this reason, lignin can be thermally treated to remove low molecular weight volatile materials and improve its heat resistance during blending. It also helps to avoid devolatilization that negatively impacts the blend morphology (by creating porosity) and properties. Based on our previous report,19 a renewable plasticizer-tall oil fatty acid (TOFA) that is essentially oleic acid enriched oil-at 10 wt% relative to PET was added to help soften PET chains and to reduce its melt-processing temperatures by 20 °C. TOFA is another co-product (apart from lignin) of the paper industry, and plant-derivatives used here in combination with the recycled PET results in lignin-based thermoplastic alloys that are malleable and reprocessable. The process does not need any solvent or toxic chemicals to make products. The process via melt-phase extrusion does not generate significant wastes. Thus, it fulfills basic principles of green chemistry. Combining thermal treatment with plasticizing permits appropriate choices in mixing temperature, to control dispersion of lignin, and associated promotion of interfacial interaction that are necessary to create higher performance sustainable composites of lignin. In summary, this study involves adept characterization of lignin, its structural transformation during thermal treatment followed by an assessment of interfacial interactions of lignin in PET matrix, and subsequent correlation to morphology and mechanical properties of sustainable PET/lignin blends.
Monofilaments of control PET and its lignin-derived blends were tested using an Instron 5943 equipped with Bluehill 3 software and pneumatic side action grip. The crosshead speed was 15 mm min−1 and the filaments cross-sectional diameters were used for calculation of cross-sectional area and applied stress. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) measurements were carried out on the monofilaments (diameter 0.20–0.40 mm depending on the sample) at 0.1% strain rate, discrete frequencies of 1, 10, and 100 Hz, and between 30 °C and 150 °C scanned at 3 °C min−1. The rheological properties were analyzed using the Discovery Hybrid rheometer (DHR-3, TA instruments). All measurements were carried out in the linear regions at 3% strain in nitrogen atmosphere. Frequency sweeps from 100 to 1 rad s−1 at 240 °C and 250 °C were performed.
Phosphitylation of OH groups in lignin allow quantification of different OH moieties of lignin by 31P NMR analysis. The 31P NMR spectra with chemical shifts and microstructural assignments are shown in Fig. 1, whereas the amount of OH groups determined from the spectra is summarized in Table 1. Thermal treatment decreased the aliphatic OH content of lignin. L has the higher amount of aliphatic hydroxyl (2.01 mmol g−1) compared to LHT (1.63 mmol g−1). This indicates that during thermal treatment, structural transformation of lignin starts with dehydration which eliminates the side chain OH groups.25 The total amount of phenolic OH increased after thermal treatment, however, the carboxylic group content remained the same. L is an organosolv-extracted hardwood lignin and is expected to have phenolic syringyl (S) and guaiacyl (G) hydroxyl groups, with little to no p-hydroxyphenyl (H) OH groups.20,26 The results are in accordance as these two groups are higher than the H–OH groups. Moreover, thermal treatment led to an overall increase of phenolic OH groups in LHT possibly due to the cleavage of β-O-4 linkages; specifically, increase in H–OH groups signifies additional demethoxylation of S and G-lignin at the 3,5- and 3-positions, respectively.27
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Fig. 1 Functional groups identified by quantitative 31P NMR measurements after phosphitylation of lignins L and LHT. |
Samples | Aliphatic OH δ 150–145 ppm | Syringyl OH δ 144.5–142.25 ppm | Guaiacyl OH | p-Hydroxyphenyl OH δ 138.5–136.5 ppm | Total phenolic OH δ 145–136.5 ppm | Carboxylic group δ 136–133.5 ppm | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Caδ 142.25–141 ppm | NCbδ 141–138.5 ppm | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
a Condensed. b Non-condensed. Chemical shifts (δ) were ascribed as per Balakshin and Capanema (2015).20 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
L | 2.01 | 2.85 | 0.80 | 1.79 | 0.42 | 5.86 | 0.45 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
LHT | 1.63 | 3.08 | 0.96 | 2.04 | 0.56 | 6.64 | 0.46 |
Two regions of the 2D HSQC NMR spectra analyzed are shown in Fig. 2. Cross peak assignments and corresponding inter-unit linkages are available in Fig. S1 and Table S1 (ESI‡). The regions possess similarities between the two treatments (L or LHT) except for a few signals. The cross peaks corresponding to Cα–Hα in β-O-4′ substructures (δC/δH = 71.9/4.9) and Cβ–Hβ in β-O-4 substructures linked to syringyl units (δC/δH = 86.3/4.15) were significantly reduced or disappeared after thermal treatment. The C5–H5 and C6–H6 in guaiacyl units were also reduced. This indicates that β-O-4′ and β-O-4 aryl ether bonds cleaved during thermal treatment and confirms the 31P NMR results discussed above. The β-O-4 linkages are easily altered by heat as discussed in previous reports.27 The expectation is that ether radicals and phenoxyl radicals will result from these cleavages and react among themselves to initiate crosslinking reactions (condensation) or remain available for further interactions (physical) during melt blending of lignin with the engineered polyester. Moreover, hindered phenolic OH groups in lignin are free radical scavengers that too are susceptible to these radicals for further condensation reactions. The possibility of condensation reactions occurring among the lignin free radicals generated during thermal treatment explains the increase of 5-substituted groups (S–OH), and condensed G-OH in LHT (Table 1).
Molecular mass and its distribution for both lignins obtained by GPC indicate significant influence of thermal treatment at 200 °C on structural transformation of lignin. GPC results show increases in Mn, Mw and Mw/Mn after thermal treatment. L was found to have Mn = 890, Mw = 1486, and Mw/Mn = 1.67, while LHT had Mn = 1103, Mw = 1924, and Mw/Mn = 1.75. The increasd average molecular weight is the result of condensation reactions that occurred during thermal treatment. Evidences of the reactions are found in features detected by 31P NMR and 2D HSQC NMR. Thermal behaviors analysis by DSC agrees with these findings as glass transition temperature of lignin increased from 86 °C to 97 °C after thermal treatment (ESI Fig. S2‡). The degree of crosslinking was mild; otherwise, pronounced crosslinking would have enlarged the macromolecules to a higher range. For example, LHT would have had a higher molecular weight and reduced viscosity. The fact that LHT still flows at ∼165 °C is an evidence of mild crosslinking. This also suggests that oxidation was avoided in vacuum. A treatment duration of 60 minutes should have been enough to advance the condensation reactions when conducted in an oxidative atmosphere.28
Thermal treatment improved thermal stability of the lignin through removal of volatiles, dehydration, crosslinking in aromatic structures and increasing the degree of condensation.25 As-received lignin started to degrade at 185 °C. Thermal treatment shifted the onset of degradation to higher temperatures to accommodate melt mixing with PET at 240 °C. TGA thermograms of L and LHT are shown in Fig. S3 (ESI‡). Weight reduction temperatures recorded at 5% weight loss was 247 °C for L compared to 265 °C for LHT. The derivative weight thermogram of as-received lignin has a shoulder from 143 °C to 258 °C that disappeared after thermal treatment by removing low molecular weight volatiles and cleaving thermally liable ether bonds. Overall, thermal treatment under vacuum only changed lignin's structure slightly to improve its thermal stability. This avoids significant oxidative degradation reactions that are detrimental to keeping the lignin malleable. In addition, the soak time of 60 minutes was sufficient to generate lignin that is thermally stable and malleable for blending with engineered polymer matrices.
Addition of lignins (L and LHT) in all compositions further reduces the melting temperatures and decreases the heat of fusion. This is evidence for reduction in crystallite sizes in PET with incorporation of lignin in the blends. Also, the difference between the behavior of L series alloys compared to LHT series alloys suggests variance in the degree of interactions between the lignins and PET. In theory, the addition of oligomeric lignin increases the free volume in the PET matrix which leads to the plasticization effect. Additionally, lignin addition shifts the recrystallization temperature (Trec) of PET to lower temperatures. Shifting of Trec and ΔHrec suggests that lignin is decelerating the recrystallization and crystal growth during cooling. Conclusions from these results show that interactions exist between both lignins and PET. These interactions could be the hydrogen bonding and π electron interactions. The degree of crystallinity (χc) was computed using eqn S1 (ESI‡) and heat of fusion. Presence of plasticizer lowers the crystallinity in PET matrix and presence of lignin further lowers the degree of crystallinity. Lignin loaded (10–30 wt%) PETPL matrix exhibits 17–26% crystallinity.
Microscopic analysis of cryo-fractured surfaces of the blends (Fig. 3) shows that the morphologies depend on the nature of lignin at 30 wt% lignin contents in the blends. The samples were etched in 1 M solution of NaOH to dissolve lignin from the cryo-fractured surface before SEM imaging. In Fig. 3a, the blend of PET and as-received lignin (L) shows lignin as less concentrated but larger droplets in the PET matrix. Lignin droplet sizes vary from 1 to 2 micrometers. However, the thermally treated lignin-derived PET blend shows formation of homogenously dispersed cavities after removal of lignin macromolecules (0.2 to 2 micrometer). Controlling lignin–lignin intermolecular interaction through thermal treatment by decreasing aliphatic hydroxyl helps avoid coalescence of the lignin phase during mixing in the engineered polyester matrix. It has been reported that controlling microstructure and dispersion of lignin in thermoplastic blends is important for improved performance.29
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Fig. 3 Scanning electron micrographs of cryo-fractured and NaOH etched surfaces of PETPL/30L (a) and PETPL/30LHT (b) blends. |
The compositional dependence of the mechanical properties limits our ability to draw a definitive conclusion on the interactions in each blend. We observe, however, that better interactions exist between the LHT and the PET compared to L blends. Nevertheless, the results of L series imply that some level of interactions is also occurring between L and PET, possibly competing hydrogen bonding between the lignin OH and PET end groups (ester and ethylene groups) and π–π interaction between aromatic groups of lignin and PET. Overall, the representative tensile stress–strain curves of the PET and its high lignin containing blends formulated at 260 °C and 240 °C (respective Fig. 4c and d) are in agreement that a combination of plasticization effects induced by the addition of TOFA and thermal treatment of lignin helped to enhanced performance of the blends. It may also be noted that the presence of lignin in the TOFA modified PET matrix enhances ductility of the product significantly. Recycled PET-based lignin-derivatives with 30% or higher elongation at failure is significant compared to the neat waste PET and plasticized waste PET that shows <5% and ∼20% elongation, respectively.
Fig. 4b shows natural logarithm of reduced tensile strength as a function of volume fraction of lignin. The reduced tensile strength is described by eqn (1).30 The plot is used for quantitative estimation of interaction using the composition dependence of strength model. The model relates the interfacial interactions, structure and the mechanical properties of the blends. It is expressed to reflect the effect of volume fraction (φ) of the dispersed component, and the load bearing capacity of the dispersed lignin constituent (B), which is dependent on interfacial adhesion.31,32
![]() | (1) |
The results are summarized in Table 2. It reveals that parameter B, which is the slope of the linear correlation applied to the data, increased from 1.82 to 2.24 when the thermally treated lignin LHT was used instead of L highlighting divergent interfacial adhesion. Thermal treatment was beneficial to improve thermal stability, control lignin–lignin intermolecular interactions and to control lignin-PET interaction likely through a combination of hydrogen bonding and π electron interactions that is clearly different in the composites based on as-received lignin (L). Calculated tensile stress of the matrix (σT0) for both cases (L and LHT series) agrees well with the measured value.
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Fig. 5 Loss tangent peak of PET, plasticized PET and its derived blends with L and LHT at in different compositions at 10 Hz frequency. |
The loss tangent data represents the energy dissipated by the materials under cyclic load. Application of the Arrhenius equation to the loss factor (tanδ) peak temperature as a function of frequency data provides quantitative evaluation for the relaxation behavior of PET phase in the blends. In this instance, the Arrhenius equation can be expressed in the following form:
![]() | (2) |
log![]() |
Neat PET | PETPL | PETPL/10L | PETPL/10LHT | PETPL/30L | PETPL/30LHT | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | T g (°C) | E a (kJ mol−1) | |
0 | 92 | 70 | 71 | 74 | 80 | 83 | ||||||
1 | 101 | 404 | 81 | 270 | 86 | 180 | 89 | 200 | 98 | 195 | 101 | 198 |
2 | 104 | 87 | 98 | 98 | 104 | 107 |
In thermoplastic matrix-lignin systems, compatibility and dispersion of lignin are desired for enhanced mechanical properties.33 Often, partial or full miscibility help improve the properties of the blends. Our results show some level of affinity between the L lignin and PET. However, such interactions are improved when LHT is used. Miscibility could have been increased by raising the melt-mixing temperature, but that approach would degrade the lignin, causing charring and subsequent phase separation during shear mixing. Viscous heating is another cause of lignin degradation during melt-mixing. Thus, rheological behaviors of the components and the blends are important. Ultimately, the process depends on the molecular structures of the components. Therefore, differences in lignin molecular structure are expected to affect rheological behaviors of the resulting polymer blends.
Influence of lignin molar structure on flow characteristics of the PET blends is illustrated in Fig. 6. The angular frequency (ω) dependence of the complex viscosity (η*) and the storage modulus (G′) were used to study flow characteristics of neat PET, its plasticized blend at 10 wt% plasticizer amount (PETPL), and its lignin derived blends at high-lignin-loading (30 wt%) at reference temperatures of 240 °C and 250 °C. Plasticization outcome is clear as the viscosity decreased at both temperatures with increasing frequency. The materials stiffness at 240 °C is higher compared to its stiffness at 250 °C (Fig. 6c and d). Addition of lignin further decreases the viscosity and the storage modulus at both reference temperatures, suggesting a role of viscous oligomeric lignin on plasticization of the PET. Interestingly, the blend with thermally treated lignin (PETPL/30LHT) has higher viscosity and storage modulus than the as-received lignin blend (PETPL/30L). As discussed earlier, this is due to the homogenous dispersion of LHT in PET (as shown by microscopy), and possible enhanced interfacial interactions through combination of hydrogen bonding and π–π interaction of lignin with PET chains and restrained chain disentanglement along with retardation of segmental relaxation (in accordance to DMA data around the glass transition temperature Tg of the blends).
Thermogravimetric analysis was used to evaluate thermal degradation behavior of the blends in oxidative atmosphere. Mass loss data collected at 20 °C min−1 scanning rate are shown in Fig. S4 in ESI.‡ The results are summarized in Table 4. Addition of lignin reduces the temperature corresponding to 5% mass loss (Ti) and the onset temperature (Td) but increases the derivative weight peak temperature. Addition of lignin improves net degradation of the blends and confirms the effect of thermal treatment of lignin on the thermal stability of the blends. LHT blend is marginally more stable at higher temperatures than the L blend. Additionally, mass at 500 °C increased with the addition of lignin showing the protective effect of lignin at higher temperatures.
PET | PETPL/30L | PETPL/30LHT | |
---|---|---|---|
5% weight loss temp. Ti (°C) | 391 | 290 | 303 |
Onset temperature Td (°C) | 400 | 388 | 390 |
DTG peak temperature (°C) | 436 | 438 | 440 |
Mass at 300 °C (%) | 99.9 | 93.9 | 95.3 |
Mass at 500 °C (%) | 14.3 | 27.1 | 27.6 |
Footnotes |
† This manuscript has been authored by UT-Battelle, LLC, under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 with the US Department of Energy (DOE). The US government retains and the publisher, by accepting the article for publication, acknowledges that the US government retains a nonexclusive, paid-up, irrevocable, worldwide license to publish or reproduce the published form of this manuscript, or allow others to do so, for US government purposes. DOE will provide public access to these results of federally sponsored research in accordance with the DOE Public Access Plan (http://energy.gov/downloads/doe-public-access-plan). |
‡ Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c9ra07052d |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |