John Wiley & Sons Characterization of Lignocellulosic Materials Cover Characterization of Lignocellulosic Materials covers recent advances in the characterization of wood.. Product #: 978-1-4051-5880-0 Regular price: $204.67 $204.67 Auf Lager

Characterization of Lignocellulosic Materials

Hu, Thomas Q. (Herausgeber)

Cover

1. Auflage März 2008
392 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-5880-0
John Wiley & Sons

Kurzbeschreibung

Characterization of Lignocellulosic Materials covers recent advances in the characterization of wood, pulp fibres and papers. It also describes the analyses of native and modified lignocellulosic fibres and materials using a range of advanced techniques such as time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, 2D heteronuclear single quantum correlation NMR, and Raman microscopy. The book provides a survey of state-of-the-art characterization methods for lignocellulosic materials, for both academic and industrial researchers who work in the fields of wood and paper, lignocelluloses-based composites and polymer blends, and bio-based fuels and materials.

Lignocellulosic materials are a natural, abundant and renewable resource essential to the functioning of industrial societies and critical to the development of a sustainable global economy. As wood and paper products, they have played an important role in the evolution of civilization. Improvement of the quality and manufacturing efficiency of such products has often been hampered by the lack of understanding of the complex structures and chemical compositions of the materials.

Due to increasing economic and environmental issues concerning the use of petrochemicals, lignocellulosic materials will be relied upon as feedstock for the production of chemicals, fuels and biocompatible materials. Significant progress has been made to use lignocellulosic materials for the production of fuel ethanol and as a reinforcing component in polymer composites. Effective and economical methods for such uses, however, remain underdeveloped, partly due to the difficulties encountered in the characterization of the structures of native lignocelluloses and lignocelluloses-based materials. Improved methods for the characterization of lignocellulosic materials are needed.

Characterization of Lignocellulosic Materials covers recent advances in the characterization of wood, pulp fibres and papers. It also describes the analyses of native and modified lignocellulosic fibres and materials using a range of advanced techniques such as time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, 2D heteronuclear single quantum correlation NMR, and Raman microscopy. The book provides a survey of state-of-the-art characterization methods for lignocellulosic materials, for both academic and industrial researchers who work in the fields of wood and paper, lignocelluloses-based composites and polymer blends, and bio-based fuels and materials.

Part 1. Novel or Improved Methods for the Characterization of Wood, Pulp Fibres & Paper.

1) 2D heteronuclear (1H-13C) single quantum correlation (HSQC) NMR analysis of Norway spruce bark components.

2) Raman Spectroscopic Characterization of Wood and Pulp Fibers.

3) Surface characterization of mechanical pulp fibres by contact angle measurement, polyelectrolyte adsorption, XPS and AFM.

4) Assessing Substrate Accessibility to Enzymatic Hydrolysis by Cellulases.

5) Characterization of alkyl ketene dimmer-sized papers by XPS and dynamic contact angle measurements.

6) Chemical Microscopy of Extractives on Fiber and Paper Surfaces.

Part 2. Characterization of Cellulose, Lignin and Modified Cellulose Fibres.

7) Deformation processes in cellulosics using Raman microscopy.

8) Life-time prediction of cellulosics by thermal and mechanical analysis.

9) Recent advances in the isolation and analysis of lignins and lignin-carbohydrate complexes.

10) Chemical Composition and Lignin Structural Features of Banana Plant Leaf Sheath and Rachis.

11) Recent advances in the characterization of lignosulfonates.

12) Integrated size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) analysis of cellulose and its derivatives.

13) 13C CPMAS NMR studies of wood, cellulose fibres and derivatives.

Part 3. Characterization of Lignocelluloses-based Composites and Polymer Blends.

14) Advances in the characterization of interfaces and the fiber surfaces in lignocellulosic fiber-reinforced composites.

15) Thermal and mechanical analysis of lignocelluloses-based biocomposites.

16) New insights into the mechanisms of compatibilization in wood-plastic composites.

17) X-ray powder diffraction analyses of kraft lignin-based thermoplastic polymer blends.

18) Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) of chemically cross-linked ethylcelluloses and ethylcellulose-methylcellulose blends.

19) DSC and AFM studies on chemically cross-linked sodium cellulose sulfate hydrogels.

20) Microscopic examination of cellulose whiskers and their nanocomposites
Dr. THOMAS Q. HU is a Principal Scientist at FPInnovations - Paprican Division and an Adjunct Professor in the Chemistry Department at the University of British Columbia (UBC). He received his B.Sc. (1983) in Polymer Science and Engineering from South China Institute of Technology, and his M.Sc. (1988) and Ph.D. (1993) in Synthetic Organic Chemistry from UBC. He joined Paprican in 1994 after a two-year tenure there as an NSERC Canada Industrial Postdoctoral Fellow.

His area of expertise is in the application of advanced, next-generation chemistry to solve various long-standing technological problems in the pulp and paper industry. He has pioneered the work in the novel modification of lignin functional groups, the development of fibre-reactive radical scavengers for the photostabilization of lignocellulosic materials, and the bleaching of lignin-rich wood pulps with phosphorus-based chemicals. He has developed a number of novel processes for the bleaching and brightness stabilization of lignin-rich wood pulps. He has over 70 publications including one edited book on Chemical Modification, Properties and Usage of Lignin, five issued international patents and several pending US and Canadian patents. He has won a number of prestigious awards including the 2004 Journal of Pulp and Paper Science Best Paper Award and the 2005 Pulp and Paper Technical Association of Canada Douglas Atack Award for Best Mechanical Pulping Paper.

Contributors to the book:
Dr. Umesh P. Agarwal
Dr. Mikhail Balakshin
Dr. S.M. Braaten
Dr. Ewellyn Capanema
Dr. Richard P. Chandra
Dr. H. Chang
Dr. Y. R. Chen
Dr. N Cordeiro
Dr. Ari R. Esteghlalia
Dr. D.V. Evtuguin
Dr. Pedro Fardim
Dr. G.E. Fredheim
Dr. Goran Gellerstedt
Dr. Wadood Y. Hamad
Dr. Hyoe Hatakeyama
Dr. Tatsuko Hatakeyama
Dr. Bjarne Holmborn
Dr. S. Horita
Dr. Akira Isogai
Dr. Krista Koljonen
Dr. Ingvild Kvien
Dr. R.A. Lauten
Dr. Stu Lebo
Dr. Kaichang Li
Dr. John A. Lu
Dr. B.F. Lutnaes
Dr. Sirkka Liisa Maunu
Dr. T.J. McNally
Dr. B.O. Myrold
Dr. T. Nanbo
Dr. Kristiina Oksman
Dr. Ana Lucia Oliveira
Dr. T. Onishi
Dr. Sherely A. Paul
Dr. Laly A. Pothen
Dr. John N. Saddler
Dr. Simo Sarkanen
Dr. Rauni Seppänen
Dr. A.J.D. Silvestre
Dr. Per Stenius
Dr. Sabu Thomas
Dr. Mikhail Yanagisawa
Dr. Liming Zhang

T. Q. Hu, University of British Columbia; FPInnovations