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The rational use of bamboo to make dissolving pulp can offer up new opportunities for cellulose production, alleviating wood scarcity. Bamboo contains a high content of non-fiber cells, which presents technical challenges in dissolving pulp production by the conventional process. In this study, a process concept of separating hemicelluloses is presented by fiber fractionation and purification for cleaner production of bamboo dissolving pulp: bamboo kraft pulp was fractionated into long-fiber and short-fiber fractions. The cellulose-rich long-fiber fraction was converted to dissolving pulp by further purification treatment with acid hydrolysis and cold caustic extraction. The hemicellulose-rich short-fiber fraction was used for papermaking. The laboratory results were confirmed by those from mill trials. The combined pulp yield (dissolving pulp + paper-grade pulp) reached 49 %, which was significantly higher than that of the conventional pre-hydrolysis kraft pulping process. Furthermore, the quality of dissolving pulp was higher due to inherently higher cellulose content of long-fiber fraction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2024.130400 | DOI Listing |
Bioresour Technol
December 2025
State Key Laboratory of Efficient Production of Forest Resources, Beijing Key Laboratory of Lignocellulosic Chemistry, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing 100083, PR China. Electronic address:
High-quality dissolving pulp is essential for cellulose acetate (CA) production. However, the inherent stability of existing dissolving pulp significantly impedes chemical penetration, posing a huge challenge. Here, a novel deep eutectic solvent (DES)-assisted endoglucanase-enriched cellulase (EG) process is developed to enhance the pulp reactivity, facilitating the production of acetate-grade dissolving pulp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, 228 Riley-Robb Hall, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
Carbon mineralization sequesters atmospheric CO by reacting it with cations from rock weathering to form carbonates. However, natural rates are too slow, and acceleration with chemical or mechanical methods is expensive. Microbial processes (acidolysis, redoxolysis, complexolysis) could speed weathering with less energy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Conserv Dent Endod
July 2025
Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, Saveetha Dental College and Hospitals, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Saveetha University, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
Introduction: Pulp capping is a viable treatment option for management of deep carious lesions in pulp preservation with reduced remaining thickness of dentin. Traditionally, calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)) and currently contemporary bioceramic pulp capping agents have been well researched in the dental domain and evidenced varying but promising success rates. However, there is a growing interest in exploring indigenous, innovative, alternative natural products derived from apiarian sources, which possess characteristics and properties which can potentiate predictable treatment outcome including antimicrobial properties.
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July 2025
Department of Wood and Paper Sciences and Technology, Gorgan University of Agriculture Sciences and Natural Resource, Gorgan, Iran.
Nitrocellulose is one of the most important cellulose derivatives used in industry and commerce, produced from raw materials such as cotton linters, dissolving wood pulp, or pure/mixed cellulose pulp. This study aims to develop an efficient process for converting pulp into nitrocellulose while minimizing particle and dust formation, acid waste, fiber damage, and production bottlenecks during nitration and boiling stages. The research involved opening dense wood pulp sheets (88-90% purity) using a laboratory mixer and a pilot-scale nitropulper.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
September 2025
Department of Paper Science and Technology, Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Tehran, Karaj, Iran.
This study investigates the sustainable upgrading of bleached kraft pulp (BKP) from softwood into dissolving-grade alpha-cellulose through a series of individual treatments: alkaline extraction, hydrothermal processing (hot water and steam), and organic solvent exposure (TFA, NMMO, and DMAc). This study aimed to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of these methods in enhancing alpha-cellulose purity while maintaining fiber integrity and reactivity. Alkaline extraction was conducted using sodium hydroxide at concentrations of 8 %, 10 %, and 12 % at varying temperatures (25-60 °C).
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