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EDITOR’S NOTE: Rogers
will receive the award in a ceremony at the National Academy of
Sciences in Washington, D.C at 5 p.m. (EDT) on June 20.
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Drs. Robin Rogers, left, and Richard Swatloski,
use an environmentally friendly solvent in developing advanced
materials. Rogers will be presented with the Environmental
Protection Agency’s 2005 Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge
Award today for the discovery.
(Photo by Laura Shill, University Relations)
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – An effort led by a University of Alabama
chemist has demonstrated a new way to dissolve and use cellulose – found
in the cell walls of trees and other plants – in producing
environmentally friendly materials that UA researchers say have
potential for the automotive, packaging and textile industries.
Dr. Robin Rogers, Distinguished University Research Professor
of Chemistry and director of UA’s Center for Green Manufacturing,
will be presented the Environmental Protection Agency’s 2005
Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award June 20, in recognition
of the new technology. Rogers is the nation’s academic winner
of the annual award, and he will join with four winners from industry.
“We can make advanced materials where the bulk of the material
would be cellulose, and we can do it through a low-energy, solution-processing
route,” said Rogers, who is leading the effort which has
already led to the awarding of two patents and has four more pending.
A key to the new techniques is the UA researchers’ discovery
that a specific solvent, known as 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride,
dissolves cellulose. This liquid is part of a new class of solvents,
known as ionic liquids, which, unlike traditional solvents, are
typically non-toxic, nonflammable, and do not evaporate, thus significantly
reducing harmful emissions, Rogers said.
While cellulose-based plastics have been used on a limited-basis
for decades, they are not as popular as petroleum-based plastics,
such as polyethylene, which are commonly used in soft drink bottles
and milk jugs. In addition to relying on a scarce natural resource
that requires dependence on foreign nations, petroleum-based plastics
are not biodegradable, and they often accumulate in landfills. “I
felt cellulose would be used more, but it didn’t have the
right properties,” Rogers said. “It doesn’t have
the right toughness, by itself, for a plastic, and you have to
find some way to modify it.”
Rogers and the research team have done that. By co-dissolving
other materials in the ionic liquid with the cellulose and then
restoring the mixture to a solid state, the UA researchers can
improve its effectiveness for specific uses.
“We’re dissolving, and/or blending, two or more different
polymers and then reconstituting them,” said Rogers, a faculty
member in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences. “That allows us to control the
physical properties, the hardness, the brittleness, the toughness
of the resulting materials.
“Cellulose is used in the plastic industry now,” Rogers
said. “Essentially, it is the way it’s being used that
we are trying to change. The unique aspect of this project is that
we have found an ionic liquid which dissolves cellulose directly
without any pre-treatment or without any derivatization.”
The scientists can also alter the form or, as Rogers calls it,
the “architecture” of the material, controlling whether
or not the material is transformed into a fiber, which could be
sewed into cloth, a semi-permeable membrane, or a harder plastic.
In its membrane form, this “designer plastic” can
serve as an early warning system to the presence of contaminants.
The UA researchers have already demonstrated, through the use of
dyes that can change color, its effectiveness as a sensor of small
amounts of mercury ions within water, for example.
Contributors
to the project, who will be recognized during the June 20 ceremony,
include: Drs. Daniel Daly, director of UA’s
Alabama Institute for Manufacturing Excellence; John Holbrey,
Jonathan Huddleston and Scott Spear, all staff scientists in
UA’s Center for Green Manufacturing; Richard Swatloski
and Megan Turner, two UA students who recently completed doctorates;
Robert Wells, executive director, Alabama Institute for Manufacturing
Excellence; and Roy Broughton, a researcher in the Center for
Green Manufacturing and department of textile engineering at
Auburn University. Undergraduate students who contributed to
the project include UA’s Jane Holly Poplin.
UA researchers are testing the robustness of the materials for
use in the automotive industry. “The ultimate goal is to
license and further develop the technology in a variety of applications,” Rogers
said. “Anywhere that you have a plastic application, there
may be a use for this type of technology.”
Environmentally friendly discoveries, such as this one, that draw
upon something produced by trees and grasses could revitalize the
state’s pulp industry, which, in recent years, has closed
or scaled back many of its paper operations, Rogers said.
“That’s really where I see this fitting in with our
green chemistry strategy.”
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