New products made with lignocellulosic nanofibers from Brazilian amazon forest

The biodiversity of the Amazon forest is undoubtedly rich; hence there is considerable variety of plant fibers regarding their morphological, chemical and structural properties. The legal exploration of the Brazilian Amazon is based on sustainable management techniques, but the generation of a relev...

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Veröffentlicht in:IOP conference series. Materials Science and Engineering 2014-01, Vol.64 (1), p.12012
Hauptverfasser: Bufalino, L, Mendes, L M, Tonoli, G H D, Rodrigues, A, Fonseca, A, Cunha, P I, Marconcini, J M
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container_title IOP conference series. Materials Science and Engineering
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creator Bufalino, L
Mendes, L M
Tonoli, G H D
Rodrigues, A
Fonseca, A
Cunha, P I
Marconcini, J M
description The biodiversity of the Amazon forest is undoubtedly rich; hence there is considerable variety of plant fibers regarding their morphological, chemical and structural properties. The legal exploration of the Brazilian Amazon is based on sustainable management techniques, but the generation of a relevant amount of plant wastes still cant be avoided. The correct destination of such materials is a challenge that Brazilian companies have to face. In this context, the National Council of Science and Technology (CNPq) promoted the creation of investigation nets on sustainability of Brazilian agribusiness. The Brazilian Net on Lignocellulosic Composites and Nanocomposites was then created, with partnership between several national and international research institutions. Until the moment, the results showed that Amazon plant fibers that are discarded as residues have great potential to nanofiber production. Nanopapers with considerable high mechanical and physical strength, proper opacity and great crystalline index were produced by using a clean and simple mechanical method. Those materials are candidates to several uses such as packaging, substrates transparent conductive films, gas barrier films, solar cells and e-papers.
doi_str_mv 10.1088/1757-899X/64/1/012012
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source Institute of Physics Open Access Journal Titles; Institute of Physics IOPscience extra; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Biodiversity
Deforestation
Lignocellulose
Nanocomposites
Nanofibers
Photovoltaic cells
Research facilities
Solar cells
Substrates
Sustainability
Vegetable fibers
title New products made with lignocellulosic nanofibers from Brazilian amazon forest
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