Chemical, colloidal and mechanical contributions to the state of water in wood cell walls - CEA - Commissariat à l’énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue New Journal of Physics Année : 2016

Chemical, colloidal and mechanical contributions to the state of water in wood cell walls

Résumé

The properties of wood depend strongly on its water content, but the physicochemical basis for the interaction of water with cell wall components is poorly understood. Due to the importance of the problem both in the context of wood technology and the biological function of swelling and dehydration for growth stresses and seed dispersal, a wealth of descriptive data has been accumulated but a microscopic theory of water-biomolecular interactions is missing.Wedevelop here, at a primitive level, a minimal parameter-free, coarse-grained, model of wood secondary cell walls to predict water absorption, in the form of an equation of state. It includes for the first time all three— mechanical, colloidal and chemical—contributions, taking into account the cell walls microstructure. The hydration force around the elongated cellulose crystals and entropy of mixing of the matrix polymers (hemicelluloses and lignin) are the dominant contributions driving the swelling. The elastic energy needed to swell the composite is the main term opposing water uptake. Hysteresis is not predicted but water uptake versus humidity, is reproduced in a large temperature range. Within this framework, the origin of wood dissolution and different effects of wood treatments on water sorption can be understood at the molecular level.

Domaines

Chimie
Bertinetti_2016.pdf (1.2 Mo) Télécharger le fichier

Dates et versions

cea-02101365 , version 1 (16-04-2019)

Identifiants

Citer

Luca Bertinetti, P. Fratzl, Thomas Zemb. Chemical, colloidal and mechanical contributions to the state of water in wood cell walls. New Journal of Physics, 2016, 18, pp.083048. ⟨10.1088/1367-2630/18/8/083048⟩. ⟨cea-02101365⟩
59 Consultations
31 Téléchargements

Altmetric

Partager

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More