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Download fileDeconstruction and Reassembly of Renewable Polymers and Biocolloids into Next Generation Structured Materials
journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-20, 20:09 authored by Blaise L. Tardy, Bruno D. Mattos, Caio G. Otoni, Marco Beaumont, Johanna Majoinen, Tero Kämäräinen, Orlando J. RojasThis review considers
the most recent developments in supramolecular
and supraparticle structures obtained from natural, renewable biopolymers
as well as their disassembly and reassembly into engineered materials.
We introduce the main interactions that control bottom-up synthesis
and top-down design at different length scales, highlighting the promise
of natural biopolymers and associated building blocks. The latter
have become main actors in the recent surge of the scientific and
patent literature related to the subject. Such developments make prominent
use of multicomponent and hierarchical polymeric assemblies and structures
that contain polysaccharides (cellulose, chitin, and others), polyphenols
(lignins, tannins), and proteins (soy, whey, silk, and other proteins).
We offer a comprehensive discussion about the interactions that exist
in their native architectures (including multicomponent and composite
forms), the chemical modification of polysaccharides and their deconstruction
into high axial aspect nanofibers and nanorods. We reflect on the
availability and suitability of the latter types of building blocks
to enable superstructures and colloidal associations. As far as processing,
we describe the most relevant transitions, from the solution to the
gel state and the routes that can be used to arrive to consolidated
materials with prescribed properties. We highlight the implementation
of supramolecular and superstructures in different technological fields
that exploit the synergies exhibited by renewable polymers and biocolloids
integrated in structured materials.