| A better  thermoplastic has been made by replacing styrene with lignin, a brittle, rigid  polymer that, with cellulose, forms the woody cell walls of plants, by  researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory. In  doing so, they have invented a solvent-free production process that interconnects  equal parts of nanoscale lignin dispersed in a synthetic rubber matrix to  produce a meltable, moldable, ductile material that is at least 10 times  tougher than ABS. The resulting thermoplastic called ABL for acrylonitrile-butadiene-lignin;  is recyclable, as it can be melted three times and still perform well. The  results, published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials, may bring  cleaner, cheaper raw materials to diverse manufacturers."The new ORNL thermoplastic has better performance than commodity plastics  like ABS," said senior author Amit Naskar in ORNL's Materials Science and  Technology Division, who along with co-inventor Chau Tran has filed a patent  application for the process to make the new material. "We can call it a  green product because 50% of its content is renewable, and technology to enable  its commercial exploitation would reduce the need for petrochemicals.
 
 The technology could make use of the lignin-rich biomass byproduct stream from  biorefineries and pulp and paper mills. With the prices of natural gas and oil  dropping, renewable fuels can't compete with fossil fuels, so biorefineries are  exploring options for developing other economically viable products. Among  cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin, the major structural constituents of  plants, lignin is the most commercially underutilized. The ORNL study aimed to  use it to produce, with an eye toward commercialization, a renewable  thermoplastic with properties rivalling those of current petroleum-derived  alternatives. To produce an energy-efficient method of synthesizing and  extruding high-performance thermoplastic elastomers based on lignin, the ORNL  team needed to answer several questions: Can variations in lignin feedstocks be  overcome to make a product with superior performance? Can lignin integrate into  soft polymer matrices? Can the chemistry and physics of lignin-derived polymers  be understood to enable better control of their properties? Can the process to  produce lignin-derived polymers be engineered?
 "Lignin is a very brittle natural polymer, so it needs to be  toughened," explained Naskar, leader of ORNL's Carbon and Composites  group. A major goal of the group is producing industrial polymers that are  strong and tough enough to be deformed without fracturing. "We need to  chemically combine soft matter with lignin. That soft matrix would be ductile  so that it can be malleable or stretchable. Very rigid lignin segments would  offer resistance to deformation and thus provide stiffness."
 All lignins are not equal in terms of heat stability. To determine what type  would make the best thermoplastic feedstock, the scientists evaluated lignin  from wheat straw, softwoods like pine and hardwoods like oak. They found  hardwood lignin is the most thermally stable, and some types of softwood  lignins are also melt-stable. Next, the researchers needed to couple the lignin  with soft matter. Chemists typically accomplish this by synthesizing polymers  in the presence of solvents. Because lignin and a synthetic rubber containing  acrylonitrile and butadiene, called nitrile rubber, both have chemical groups  in which electrons are unequally distributed and therefore likely to interact,  Naskar and Chau Tran (who performed melt-mixing and characterization  experiments) instead tried to couple the two in a melted phase without  solvents.
 In a heated chamber with two rotors, the researchers "kneaded" a  molten mix of equal parts powdered lignin and nitrile rubber. During mixing,  lignin agglomerates broke into interpenetrating layers or sheets of 10 to 200  nanometers that dispersed well in and interacted with the rubber. Without the  proper selection of a soft matrix and mixing conditions, lignin agglomerates  are at least 10 times larger than those obtained with the ORNL process. The  product that formed had properties of neither lignin nor rubber, but something  in between, with a combination of lignin's stiffness and nitrile rubber's  elasticity.
 By altering the acrylonitrile amounts in the soft matrix, the researchers hoped  to improve the material's mechanical properties further. They tried 33, 41 and  51% acrylonitrile and found 41% gave an optimal balance between toughness and  stiffness. Next, the researchers wanted to find out if controlling the  processing conditions could improve the performance of their polymer alloy. For  example, 33% acrylonitrile content produced a material that was stretchy but  not strong, behaving more like rubber than plastic. At higher proportions of  acrylonitrile, the researchers saw the materials strengthen because of the efficient  interaction between the components. They also wanted to know at what  temperature the components should be mixed to optimize the material properties.  They found heating components between 140 and 160 degrees Celsius formed the  desired hybrid phase.
 
 Using resources at ORNL including the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences,  a DOE Office of Science User Facility, the scientists analyzed the morphologies  of the blends. Scanning electron microscopy, performed by Chau Tran, explored  the surfaces of the materials. Jihua Chen and Tran characterized soft matter  phases using transmission electron microscopy, placing a thin slice of material  in the path of an electron beam to reveal structure through contrast  differences in the lignin and rubber phases. Small-angle x-ray scattering by  Jong Keum revealed repeated clusters of certain domain or layer sizes. Fourier  transform infrared spectroscopy identified chemical functional groups and their  interactions.
 Future studies will explore different feedstocks, particularly those from  biorefineries, and correlations among processing conditions, material structure  and performance. Investigations are also planned to study the performance of  ORNL's new thermoplastic in carbon-fiber-reinforced composites. "More  renewable materials will probably be used in the future," Naskar said.  "I'm glad that we could continue work in renewable materials, not only for  automotive applications but even for commodity usage."
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