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Tom Lindström

Researcher at Royal Institute of Technology

Publications -  157
Citations -  14828

Tom Lindström is an academic researcher from Royal Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cellulose & Nanocellulose. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 150 publications receiving 12925 citations.

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Nanocelluloses: A New Family of Nature-Based Materials

TL;DR: This Review assembles the current knowledge on the isolation of microfibrillated cellulose from wood and its application in nanocomposites; the preparation of nanocrystalline cellulose and its use as a reinforcing agent; and the biofabrication of bacterial nanocellulose, as well as its evaluation as a biomaterial for medical implants.
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Cellulose nanopaper structures of high toughness.

TL;DR: Wood nanofibrils are used to prepare porous cellulose nanopaper of remarkably high toughness and the large strain-to-failure means that mechanisms, such as interfibril slippage, also contributes to inelastic deformation in addition to deformation of the nan ofibrils themselves.
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An environmentally friendly method for enzyme-assisted preparation of microfibrillated cellulose (MFC) nanofibers

TL;DR: In this article, cellulosic wood fiber pulps are treated by endoglucanases or acid hydrolysis in combination with mechanical shearing in order to disintegrate microfibrillated cellulose nanofibers from the wood fiber cell wall.
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Oxygen and oil barrier properties of microfibrillated cellulose films and coatings

TL;DR: In this paper, the preparation of carboxymethylated microfibrillated cellulose (MFC) films by dispersion-casting from aqueous dispersions and by surface coating on base papers is described.
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Long and entangled native cellulose I nanofibers allow flexible aerogels and hierarchically porous templates for functionalities

TL;DR: Paakko et al. as mentioned in this paper demonstrate that such aqueous nanofibrillar gels are unexpectedly robust to allow formation of highly porous aerogels by direct water removal by freeze-drying.