Vol.:(0123456789) 1 3
Journal of Biomolecular NMR
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10858-019-00272-2
ARTICLE
Investigation of the internal structure and dynamics of cellulose
by
13
C‑NMR relaxometry and 2DPASS‑MAS‑NMR measurements
Manasi Ghosh
1
· Naveen Kango
2
· Krishna Kishor Dey
1
Received: 2 May 2019 / Accepted: 15 July 2019
© Springer Nature B.V. 2019
Abstract
Internal structure and dynamics of commercial and natural cellulose were studied by measuring chemical shift anisotropy
(CSA) parameters, and spin–lattice relaxation rate (1/T
1
) at each and every chemically diferent carbon nuclear site. CSA
parameters were measured by
13
C two-dimensional phase adjusted spinning sideband (2DPASS) cross-polarization magic
angle spinning (CP-MAS) NMR experiment. Site specifc spin–lattice relaxation time was measured by Torchia-CP method.
Anisotropy parameters of C4 and C6 regions are higher than C1 and C235 regions and asymmetry of C4 line is lower than
any other carbon site. The higher values of CSA parameters of C4 and C6 nuclei arise due to the rotation of O4–C4, C1–O4,
O5–C5–C6–O6 and C4–C5–C6–O6 bonds at torsion angles ψ, Φ, χ and χ′ respectively and the infuence of interchain and
intrachain hydrogen bondings. Two distinct peaks are also observed for C4 and C6 resonance line position—one peak arises
primarily due to the nuclei in amorphous region and another one arises due to the same nuclei resides in paracrystalline
region. The spin–lattice relaxation time and the CSA parameters are diferent at these two distinct peak positions of C4 and
C6 line. Molecular correlation time of each and every chemically diferent carbon site was calculated with the help of CSA
parameters and spin–lattice relaxation time. The molecular correlation time of the amorphous region is one order of mag-
nitude less than the crystalline region. The distinction between amorphous and paracrystalline regions of cellulose is more
vividly portrayed by determining spin–lattice relaxation time, CSA parameters, and molecular correlation time at each and
every chemically diferent carbon site. This type of study correlating the structure and dynamics of cellulose will illuminate
the path of inventing biomimetic materials.
* Krishna Kishor Dey
dey.12@buckeyemail.osu.edu
Manasi Ghosh
manasi.ghosh@gmail.com
1
Department of Physics, Dr. Harisingh Gour Central
University, Sagar, MP 470003, India
2
Department of Microbiology, Dr. Harisingh Gour Central
University, Sagar, MP 470003, India