Conformations and Intermolecular Interactions in
Cellulose/Silk Fibroin Blend Films: A Solid-State NMR Perspective
Tian, DL (Tian, Donglin)[ 1,2 ] ; Li, T (Li, Tao)[ 1,2 ] ; Zhang, RC (Zhang, Rongchun)[ 3 ] ; Wu, Q (Wu, Qiang)[ 1,2 ] ; Chen, TH (Chen, Tiehong)[ 4,5 ] ; Sun, PC (Sun, Pingchuan)[ 1,2,3,5 ] ; Ramamoorthy, A (Ramamoorthy, Ayyalusamy)[ 6,7 ]
JOURNAL OF
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B, 2017, 121(25): 6108-6116
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b02838
WOS:000404828700002
Abstract
Fabricating
materials with excellent mechanical performance from the natural renewable and
degradable biopolymers has drawn significant attention in recent decades due to
the environmental concerns and energy crisis. As two of the most promising
substitutes of synthetic polymers, silk fibroin (SF), and cellulose, have been
widely used in the field of textile, biomedicine, biotechnology, etc.
Particularly, the cellulose/SF blend film exhibits better strength and
toughness than that of regenerated cellulose film. Herein, this study is aimed
to understand the molecular origin of the enhanced mechanical properties for
the cellulose/SF blend film, using solid-state NMR as a main tool to
investigate the conformational changes, intermolecular interactions between cellulose
and SF and the water organization. It is found that the content of the
beta-sheet structure is increased in the cellulose/SF blend film with respect
to the regenerated SF film, accompanied by the reduction of the content of
random coil structures. In addition, the strong hydrogen bonding interaction
between the SF and cellulose is clearly elucidated by the two-dimensional (2D)
H-1-C-13 heteronuclear correlation (HETCOR) NMR experiments, demonstrating that
the SF and cellulose are miscible at the molecular level. Moreover, it is also
found that the -NH groups of SF prefer to form hydrogen bonds with the hydroxyl
groups bonded to carbons C2 and C3 of cellulose, while the hydroxyl groups
bonded to carbon C6 and the ether oxygen are less favorable for hydrogen
bonding interactions with the -NH groups of SF. Interestingly, bound water is
found to be present in-the air-dried cellulose/SF blend film, which is
predominantly associated with the cellulose backbones as determined by 2D
H-1-C-13 wide-line-separation (WISE) experiments with spin diffusion. This
clearly reveals the presence of nanoheterogeneity in the cellulose/SF blend
film, although cellulose and SF are miscible at a molecular level. Without
doubt, these in-depth atomic-level structural information could help reveal the
molecular origin of the enhanced mechanical properties of the blend film, and
thus to establish the structure-property relationship, which could further
provide guidance for the fabrication of high performance biopolymer-based materials.