화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.35, No.4, 717-723, 1997
The Relationship Between Intramolecular Hydrogen-Bonds and Certain Physical-Properties of Regioselectively Substituted Cellulose Derivatives
This article tries to provide some direct evidence about the relationship between the intramolecular hydrogen bonds in cellulose and their corresponding effect on physical properties. The formation of intramolecular hydrogen bonds has been proved to contribute directly to certain physical properties of cellulose, such as its solubility in solvents having different polarities, the relative reactivities of the hydroxyls in a repeating unit and its crystallinity, using a 6-O-methylcellulose (6MC) film that was known(1) to have intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The excellent solubility of 6MC when compared with other cellulose derivatives indicated a lack of interchain hydrogen bonds. A comparison of the relative reactivities between the C-2 and C-3 position hydroxyls in 6MC also indicates that intramolecular hydrogen bonds once formed in 6MC films are possibly maintained even after dissolution in solvents. In addition, the poor crystallinity exhibited by 6MC supports the idea that crystallization in cellulosics may be dependent more upon preferencial interchain hydrogen bonding at the C-6 position hydroxyls than upon a uniform structure such as that found in 6MC, where every structural unit is completely and regioselectively substituted, distinguishing it from other synthetic polymers such as polyolefins and polyesters.