The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions

It has been proposed that hydrogen bonding plays a role in promoting the electrospinnability of some materials. In this work, the significance of non-covalent interactions in the electrospinnability of aqueous sugar solutions (i.e. mono- and disaccharide) was investigated as a function of carbohydra...

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Main Authors: Lepe Pablo G. T., Tucker Nick, Watson Andrew J.A., LeCorre-Bordes Deborah, Fairbanks Antony J., Staiger Mark P.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2017-06-01
Series:Applied Rheology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-27-35703
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spelling doaj-bbeabd9bb87143d48b4f7668a3fce98c2021-09-06T19:41:56ZengDe GruyterApplied Rheology1617-81062017-06-01273182710.3933/applrheol-27-35703The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar SolutionsLepe Pablo G. T.0Tucker Nick1Watson Andrew J.A.2LeCorre-Bordes Deborah3Fairbanks Antony J.4Staiger Mark P.5Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800,Christchurch8140, New ZealandUniversity of Lincoln, School of Engineering, Brayford Pool,LincolnLN6 7TS, UKDepartment of Chemistry, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800,Christchurch8140, New ZealandThe New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Limited, Canterbury Agriculture & Science Centre, Gerald St,Lincoln7608, New ZealandDepartment of Chemistry, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800,Christchurch8140, New Zealand The New ZealandDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of Canterbury, Private Bag 4800,Christchurch8140, New ZealandIt has been proposed that hydrogen bonding plays a role in promoting the electrospinnability of some materials. In this work, the significance of non-covalent interactions in the electrospinnability of aqueous sugar solutions (i.e. mono- and disaccharide) was investigated as a function of carbohydrate concentration. The electrospinnability of concentrated aqueous solutions of glucose, fructose, and sucrose was studied by physicochemical and rheological characterization methods, and by subsequently examining the resulting morphology via scanning electron microscopy. The results on the electrospinning of concentrated saccharide solutions indicated the significance of non-covalent interactions on the electrospinning of these systems. Electrospinnability models based on critical concentration and visco-elasto capillary theories were compared with the experimental results. It is shown that visco-elasto capillary theory has the closest correlation with the experimental data. The electrospinnability of highly concentrated saccharide solutions appears to be directly related to the density and intermolecular bonding capacity of the solution.https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-27-35703electrospinningnanofibressaccharidehydrogen bondingcarbohydrates
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lepe Pablo G. T.
Tucker Nick
Watson Andrew J.A.
LeCorre-Bordes Deborah
Fairbanks Antony J.
Staiger Mark P.
spellingShingle Lepe Pablo G. T.
Tucker Nick
Watson Andrew J.A.
LeCorre-Bordes Deborah
Fairbanks Antony J.
Staiger Mark P.
The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
Applied Rheology
electrospinning
nanofibres
saccharide
hydrogen bonding
carbohydrates
author_facet Lepe Pablo G. T.
Tucker Nick
Watson Andrew J.A.
LeCorre-Bordes Deborah
Fairbanks Antony J.
Staiger Mark P.
author_sort Lepe Pablo G. T.
title The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
title_short The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
title_full The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
title_fullStr The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
title_full_unstemmed The Electrospinnability of Visco-Elastic Sugar Solutions
title_sort electrospinnability of visco-elastic sugar solutions
publisher De Gruyter
series Applied Rheology
issn 1617-8106
publishDate 2017-06-01
description It has been proposed that hydrogen bonding plays a role in promoting the electrospinnability of some materials. In this work, the significance of non-covalent interactions in the electrospinnability of aqueous sugar solutions (i.e. mono- and disaccharide) was investigated as a function of carbohydrate concentration. The electrospinnability of concentrated aqueous solutions of glucose, fructose, and sucrose was studied by physicochemical and rheological characterization methods, and by subsequently examining the resulting morphology via scanning electron microscopy. The results on the electrospinning of concentrated saccharide solutions indicated the significance of non-covalent interactions on the electrospinning of these systems. Electrospinnability models based on critical concentration and visco-elasto capillary theories were compared with the experimental results. It is shown that visco-elasto capillary theory has the closest correlation with the experimental data. The electrospinnability of highly concentrated saccharide solutions appears to be directly related to the density and intermolecular bonding capacity of the solution.
topic electrospinning
nanofibres
saccharide
hydrogen bonding
carbohydrates
url https://doi.org/10.3933/applrheol-27-35703
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