March 14, 2017
Journal Article

Discovery of Cellulose Surface Layer Conformation by Nonlinear Vibrational Spectroscopy

Abstract

Significant questions remain with respect to the structure and polymorphs of cellulose. These include the cellulose surface layers and the bulk crystalline core as well as the conformational differences. The Total Internal Reflection Sum Frequency Generation Vibrational Spectroscopy (TIR-SFG-VS) combined with the conventional SFG-VS (non-TIR) can help to resolve these questions by selectively characterizing the molecular structures of surface layers and the crystalline core of cellulose. From the SFG spectra in the C-H and O-H regions, we found that the surface layers of Avicel are essentially amorphous; while the surface layers of Iß cellulose are crystalline but with different structural and spectroscopic signatures than that of its crystalline core. This work demonstrates the capacity of TIR and Non-TIR SFG-VS tools in selectively studying the structures and polymorphs of cellulose. In addition, these results also suggest that the assignments of major vibrational peaks for cellulose need to be further determined.

Revised: February 25, 2020 | Published: March 14, 2017

Citation

Zhang L., L. Fu, H. Wang, and B. Yang. 2017. Discovery of Cellulose Surface Layer Conformation by Nonlinear Vibrational Spectroscopy. Scientific Reports 7. PNNL-SA-120731. doi:10.1038/srep44319