The glass transition temperature of isolated native, residual, and technical lignin

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Abstract

The glass transition temperatures (Tg) of native, residual, and technical lignins are important to lignocellulose pulping, pulp processing and side stream utilization; however, how the structural changes from native to residual and technical lignin influences Tg has proven difficult to elucidate. Since the Tg of macromolecules is greatly influenced by the molecular weight, low-molecular-weight fractions, such as milled wood lignin (MWL), are poor representatives of lignin in the cell wall. To circumvent this problem, lignins of both high yield and purity were isolated from Norway spruce and softwood kraft pulp using the enzymatic mild acidolysis lignin (EMAL) protocol. Technical softwood kraft lignin was also fractionated into groups of different molecular weights, to acquire lignin that spanned over a wide molecular-weight range. A powder sample holder for dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), was used to determine the Tg of lignins, for which calorimetric methods were not sensitive enough. The Tgs of EMAL were found to be closer to their in situ counterparts than MWL.

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Henrik-Klemens, Å., Caputo, F., Ghaffari, R., Westman, G., Edlund, U., Olsson, L., & Larsson, A. (2024). The glass transition temperature of isolated native, residual, and technical lignin. Holzforschung, 78(4), 216–230. https://doi.org/10.1515/hf-2023-0111

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