Abstract
Here, we monitor the dissolution of several natural protein fibres such as wool, human hair and silk, in various ionic liquids (ILs). The dissolution of protein-based materials using ILs is an emerging area exploring the production of new materials from waste products. Wool is a keratin fibre, which is extensively used in the textiles industry and as a result has considerable amounts of waste produced each year. Wool, along with human hair, has a unique morphology whereby the outer layer, the cuticle, is heavily cross linked with disulphide bonds, whereas silk does not have this outer layer. Here we show how ILs dissolve natural protein fibres and how the mechanism of dissolution is directly related to the structure and morphology of the wool fibre. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
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Chen, J., Vongsanga, K., Wang, X., & Byrne, N. (2014). What happens during natural protein fibre dissolution in ionic liquids. Materials, 7(9), 6158–6168. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma7096158
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