The Role of TEMPO/NaBr/NaClO in Hemp Fiber Oxidation: Deciphering the Mechanism and Reaction Kinetics.
Lingping Kong, Peiyu Du, Lizhou Pei, Dan Sun
Abstract
Open AccessIn this study, the oxidation of industrial hemp staple fibers by the TEMPO/NaBr/NaClO system was explored by the real-time monitoring of the changes in reaction rate, selective oxidative conversion, and reaction time under different operating conditions such as TEMPO usage, NaBr usage, NaClO usage, reaction time, and reaction temperature. We propose a variable-speed competition mechanism between NaClO and TEMPO, which provides experimental support for the long-standing hypothesis that hypochlorite delays acid formation through modulation of the HOCl/OCl- and HOBr/OBr- equilibrium dynamics. The innovative use of combined analysis for several consecutive first-order reactions to investigate the rate-limiting reactions of TEMPO, TEMPO+, and TEMPOH over a range of concentrations revealed that the reaction that generates TEMPOH is the key rate-limiting reaction. We characterize the apparent oxidation kinetics of industrial hemp staple fiber in the TEMPO/NaBr/NaClO system using a pseudo-first-order kinetic model, revealing distinct apparent reaction rates across both primary and secondary bast fiber regions. This paper explained the difference in reaction rate between the two aspects of microfibril spatial structure and cellulose crystal structure. The single-factor analysis indicates that reaction time and temperature exert the most significant influence on the conversion rate of selective oxidation within this system.