Making Fibers Softer and More Absorbent.

PositionUsing supercritical carbon dioxide - Brief Article

Researchers at Ohio State University, Columbus, have found that a supercritical fluid form of carbon dioxide could deposit a chemical additive into a sheet of polymer fibers to make the material more absorbent. Supercritical carbon dioxide is composed of [CO.sub.2] molecules heated under pressure and held in a state somewhere between a liquid and a gas. The supercritical carbon dioxide carries additives deep into materials like cloth, plastic, and paper, just as hazardous organic solvents do, but without diminishing the material's appearance or strength and without creating hazardous by-products.

The researchers drove supercritical carbon dioxide into a polymer, a material in which the stringy molecules wrap around each other like a tangled rope. The carbon dioxide molecules wedged between the strings, swelling the polymer matrix. Once the polymer swelled, other molecules could enter it much more easily through the enlarged holes between the strings.

They then added molecules of detergent to the swollen polymer to make it absorb water better. After they removed the supercritical carbon dioxide and the polymer shrunk back down to its original size, the detergent molecules remained trapped inside the polymer. "We didn't change the chemical nature of the polymer, and we didn't change its strength," explains David Tomasko, assistant professor of chemical engineering. "We changed the surface...

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