Friday, May 31, 2019

24 Carat Chemistry

I was trying to buy a present for my mum for Mothers' Day. "A gold chain," I thought, "would be a nice present". But when I got to the jewellery shop I found that there is a huge variety of "gold chains", 24 carat gold, 18 carat gold, 9 carat gold, 995, 750, 375, white gold, rose gold...
So what is a carat?
What do those numbers mean?
How can "gold" be different colours?

Read all about it in the June 2019 issue of AUS-e-NEWS

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Thursday, May 9, 2019

Nanocellulose Foam

You have probably held polystyrene cups (styrofoam cups) in your hands. It is a wonderful material for making disposable cups because it is light-weight, holds it shape well, and is an excellent insulator. All this means that you can fill a polystyrene cup with hot tea and drink from it without having it burn your hands. High school chemistry teachers are very fond of using polystyrene cups as "cup calorimeters" in the school laboratory. Unfortunately, polystyrene is not an environmentally friendly polymer, it doesn't break down, it is chemically inert, so persists in the environment.
Plant-based polymers which degrade in time, such as cellulose, could replace polystyrene if we can make a cellulose-based material with same properties as polystyrene.
Cellulose is a polysaccharide. It is composed of many glucose units joined together by ether bonds (glycosidic links). During acid hydrolysis these ether bonds (glycosidic links) are attacked and broken so that the final product of a complete reaction is a lot of glucose molecules. The reaction mechanism for the acid hydrolysis of cellulose is shown below:

Mechanism of acid hydrolysis of cellulose.
If only some of the ether bonds (glycosidic links) within a cellulose polymer chain are attacked, then you could end up with shorter chains of glucose polymer, still enough glucose units in the chain to be considered cellulose. If these chains are only 5-20 nanometres wide (even though they may be several micrometres long) they will be referred to as nanocellulose.
Researchers at Washington State University have added polyvinyl alcohol, shown below:
to nanocellulose. Polyvinyl alcohol binds to the nanocellulose which stabilises the foam that can be  produced. This light-weight material is reported to be a better insulator than polystyrene foam (styrofoam) and "can support up to 200 times its weight without changing shape. It degrades well, and burning it doesn't produce polluting ash."

Suggested Further Reading:
Nanotechnology

Suggested Study Questions:
  1. Convert the following measurements to metres (m):
    • 5 nm
    • 20 nm
    • 100 μm
    • 1000 μm
  2.  Convert the following measurements to nanometres (nm)
    • 5 × 10-9 m
    • 2.5 μm
    • 5.2 mm
    • 0.75 cm
  3. Draw a section of cellulose polymer containing 6 glucose units. Circle the ether bonds (glycosidic links) in red.
  4. Draw the results of acid hydrolysis if all the ether bonds (glycosidic links) in this section of cellulose polymer were broken.
  5. Draw the results of acid hydrolysis on the section of cellulose polymer you drew for question 3 if only 2 new "molecules" are produced. Is there only one possible answer? If more than one answer is possible, how many possible answers can you think of?
  6. Consider the structure of cellulose and of polyvinyl alcohol. Explain how polyvinyl alcohol can "bind with" cellulose. 
  7. Explain why a nanocellulose foam can be stabilised by adding polyvinyl alcohol.
  8. Consider the combustion of cellulose. Give the products for
    • complete combustion of cellulose
    • incomplete combustion of cellulose
  9. Wood is composed largely of cellulose. When a wood log burns on a camp fire it produces a sooty flame. Explain why.
  10. Explain why nanocellulose is unlikely to produce a sooty flame when it burns.