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Increasing wet adhesion between cellulose surfaces with polyvinylamine

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Abstract

The conditions are elucidated whereby strong adhesive joints between two wet cellulose surfaces can be achieved with a polyelectrolyte adhesive. Adhesion results were obtained with wet, TEMPO oxidized, regenerated cellulose membranes that were laminated with polyvinylamine (PVAm) adhesive. Wet adhesion was determined as the 90° wet-peel delamination force. Aldehyde groups on the oxidized cellulose form imine and aminal covalent linkages with PVAm, covalently grafting PVAm onto the cellulose surfaces. From these results we conclude that the adhesive polymer must be covalently grafted to the cellulose surface—physically adsorbed polymers give weak polymer/cellulose interfaces in water. There are two cases which are remarkably different—never-dried joints versus dried and rewetted joints, we call once-dried. The strength of never-dried joints is important in paper manufacturing and is likely to be critical in the manufacture of the new nanocellulose composites and foams described in the recent literature. Only one adhesive joint architecture gave significant never-dried strength—joints with only a monolayer of polyelectrolyte adhesive sandwiched between two cellulose surfaces. We propose that polymeric chains are simultaneously covalently grafted onto both cellulose surfaces. In the usual case of bringing together two polymer coated cellulose surfaces in water, there is no never-dried wet adhesion because electrosteric stabilization inhibits significant molecular contact between opposing adsorbed polymers. By contrast, high once-dried wet adhesion is easier to achieve because polymer–polymer molecular contact is promoted by water removal. The requirements for once-dried wet adhesion are polyelectrolyte grafting to cellulose and cohesion within polymer layers, either due to covalent crosslinking, or attractive physical interactions.

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Acknowledgments

BASF Canada is acknowledged for funding this project through a grant to RP entitled “Understanding Cellulose Interactions with Reactive Polyvinylamines”. Dr. Emil Gustafsson is thanked for useful discussions and Dr. Lina Liu for help with the radio isotope experiments in Professor Sheardown’s laboratory. Some measurements were performed in the McMaster Biointerfaces Institute funded by the Canadian Foundation for Innovation. R.P. holds the Canada Research Chair in Interfacial Technologies.

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Correspondence to Robert H. Pelton.

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10570_2018_2165_MOESM1_ESM.pdf

The file contains—a table of membrane physical properties—details for the aldehyde assay—moisture content vs relative humidity for a membrane and a PVAm film—viscosity data used to estimate c*—the influence of PVAm adsorption concentration of αα wet adhesion—the influence of NaCl concentration of adsorption and adhesion—the influence of rewetting solution pH—the influence of rewetting time on wet adhesion (PDF 587 kb)

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Yang, D., Stimpson, T.C., Soucy, J. et al. Increasing wet adhesion between cellulose surfaces with polyvinylamine. Cellulose 26, 341–353 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-018-2165-9

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