JOURNAL ARTICLE

ENVIRONMENTALLY FRIENDLY CELLULOSIC FIBERS FROM CORN STALKS

Dan GavrilescuAna Maria ChescaBogdan-Marian TofanicaAdrian Cătălin PuițelRaluca Nicu

Year: 2018 Journal:   Environmental Engineering and Management Journal Vol: 17 (7)Pages: 1765-1771   Publisher: Polytechnic Institute of Iasi

Abstract

One of the main causes of global climate change is deforestation.Wood is largely used in construction, furniture, and pulp and paper industries, which consume hundred of millions of cubic meter of wood year by year.Forest surfaces decrease rapidly at global level and this reality is of crucial importance for world global ecological footprint.Shortage of pulpwood for paper industry became a great challenge and, for this reason, other raw materials must be taken into consideration.Recovered paper is the most important raw material for paper industry, but low paper grades can be produced only.Collection rate of recovered paper is high in most countries and there are no additional quantities to assure the large requirements of the paper industry.Today, nonwood plants are considered more and more important raw material for this industry.Wheat and rice straws are used for decades to produce chemical pulp in many Asian and European countries.This paper investigates the possibility of replacing pulpwood with corn stalks as raw material in producing chemical pulp for paper.Corn stalks are abundant agricultural waste in Romania, since more than 12 million tones of stalks were generated in 2017.It was found that corn stalks contain less lignin than wood and can be delignified using less chemicals, at lower temperatures and in shorter time.Moreover, corn stalks can be processed using ordinary reagents like sodium hydroxide, and pulps with different yields and lignin content can result.Natron pulping of corn stalks offers pulps with reasonable strength properties which can replace wood pulp in obtaining papers for corrugated board.

Keywords:
Environmentally friendly Cellulosic ethanol Pulp and paper industry Cellulose fiber Cellulose Environmental science Waste management Agronomy Chemistry Engineering Biology Organic chemistry Ecology

Metrics

16
Cited By
0.24
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.54
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Lignin and Wood Chemistry
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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