Cellulose acetate is easily wetted.
Viscose and cellulose acetate are products derived from the chemical processing of wood.
yes
maybe
no
Cellulose is one of many polymers found in nature. Wood, paper, and cotton all contain cellulose. Cellulose is an excellent fiber. Wood, cotton, and hemp rope are all made of fibrous cellulose. Cellulose is made of repeat units of the monomer glucose. This is the same glucose which your body metabolizes in order to live, but you can't digest it in the form of cellulose. Because cellulose is built out of a sugar monomer, it is called a polysaccharide.Cellulose acetate was first prepared by Paul Schützenberger in 1865. Commercially, cellulose acetate is made from processed wood pulp. Cellulose acetate fibres are used for textiles and clothing by many of the top designers in the world. Early frames for spectacles were cut from sheets of cellulose acetate. While use of cellulose acetate has largely been superseded by injection moulding with more modern thermoplastics, some up-market spectacles are still made in this way.
cellulose acetate
same properties
I think it is because the steric hindrance casued by the ester groups, which are more in cellulose triacetate
v=sqrt(E/rho)
Jacqueline M. Lane has written: 'Solid state NMR studies of cellulose and cellulose acetate'
Legos first used cellulose acetate. Then, they switched to ABS plastic.