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Dive into the research topics where Anna-Maija Saariaho is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna-Maija Saariaho.


Applied Spectroscopy | 2003

Ultra Violet Resonance Raman Spectroscopy in Lignin Analysis: Determination of Characteristic Vibrations of p-Hydroxyphenyl, Guaiacyl, and Syringyl Lignin Structures:

Anna-Maija Saariaho; Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Mari Nuopponen; Tapani Vuorinen

Raman spectroscopy of wood and lignin samples is preferably carried out in the near-infrared region because lignin produces an intense laser-induced fluorescence background at visible excitation wavelengths. However, excitation of aromatic and conjugated lignin structures with deep ultra violet (UV) light gives resonance-enhanced Raman signals while the overlapping fluorescence is eliminated. In this study, ultra violet resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy was used to define characteristic vibration bands of model compounds of p-hydroxyphenyl, guaiacyl, and syringyl lignin structures at three excitation wavelengths (229, 244, and 257 nm). The intensities of each band, relative to the intensity of the aromatic vibration band at 1600 cm−1, were defined and the most suitable excitation wavelength was suggested for each structure. p-Hydroxyphenyl structures showed intensive characteristic bands at 1217–1214 and 1179–1167 cm−1 with excitation at 244 nm, whereas the bands of guaiacyl structures were more intensive with 257 nm excitation. Most intensive characteristic bands of guaiacyl structures were found at 1289–1279, 1187–1185, 1158–1155, and 791–704 cm−1. Syringyl structures had almost identical spectra with 244 and 257 nm excitations with characteristic bands at 1514–1506, 1333–1330, and 981–962 cm−1. The characteristic bands of the three structural units were also found from the compression wood, softwood, and hardwood samples, indicating that UVRR spectroscopy can be applied for the determination of chemical structures of lignin.


Holzforschung | 2004

Resonance Raman spectroscopy of highly fluorescing lignin containing chemical pulps: Suppression of fluorescence with an optical Kerr gate

Anna-Maija Saariaho; Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Pavel Matousek; Michael Towrie; Anthony W. Parker; Tapani Vuorinen

Abstract Raman spectroscopy using 400 nm excitation was successfully applied to chemical pulp samples and the fluorescence background that usually limits the application of this method to such samples was effectively suppressed. This enabled the detection of much weaker Raman bands from the pulps. The rejection ratio of the fluorescence background to Raman scattering was estimated to be about 250. The resonance Raman spectra of peroxide bleached chemical pulps had chromophoric lignin bands at 1605 and 1655 cm−1, whereas the chlorine dioxide bleached pulps had only the aromatic band at 1605 cm−1. The square root of the aromatic chromophore band relative to cellulose band correlated linearly with the brightness which is in accordance with the Kubelka-Munk theory. This correlation indicated that the resonance enhanced Raman bands were mainly due to chromophoric lignin structures. Chlorine dioxide and peroxide bleached pulps gave different correlations to brightness, which was an indication of different kinds of chromophores in these pulps. The intensity of the aromatic band relative to the cellulose band was about 20 times higher with the ultraviolet (257 nm) than with the visible (400 nm) excitation. This clearly illustrated the importance of working with different excitation wavelengths. On one hand the UV excitation is more sensitive towards aromatic residual lignin in pulp, and on the other hand the visible excitation enables the selective detection of chromophoric lignin structures.


Holzforschung | 2006

Application of UV-Vis and resonance Raman spectroscopy to study bleaching and photoyellowing of thermomechanical pulps

Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Anna-Maija Saariaho; Jouko Vyörykkä; Tapani Vuorinen; Pavel Matousek; Anthony W. Parker

Abstract The chemistry of thermomechanical pulp bleaching and brightness reversion was studied. First, UV-Vis reflectance spectroscopy was used to obtain information on the reactive structures in pulp. Based on these data, a Raman excitation wavelength was chosen close to the absorption bands of the chromophores formed to take advantage of the resonance enhancement (resonance Raman spectroscopy). Fluorescence was rejected with a picosecond Kerr gate. The results revealed that coniferyl aldehyde structures were partly removed by alkaline peroxide bleaching and these structures were further degraded during light exposure. However, this reaction was obviously not responsible for chromophore formation in the pulp. On the other hand, based on the resonance Raman spectra, formation of quinonoid structures, possibly para-quinones, was a more prominent explanation for the brightness reversion.


Journal of Wood Chemistry and Technology | 2005

Quantification of Lignin and Hexenuronic Acid in Bleached Hardwood Kraft Pulps: A New Calibration Method for UVRR Spectroscopy and Evaluation of the Conventional Methods

Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Anna-Maija Saariaho; Tapani Vuorinen

Abstract Lignin content determination is an important task when pulp bleaching is studied. However, none of the conventional methods were developed for bleached pulps and therefore they are accurate mainly for unbleached pulps. This article describes a new, rapid method to determine lignin and hexenuronic acid contents of bleached hardwood kraft pulps based on UV resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy. The lignin contents of pulp samples were determined from the aromatic band heights of the UVRR spectra. Therefore the measurements gave the content of aromatic lignin in pulp, and did not include extensively oxidized lignin structures. The method was applicable for hardwood kraft pulps with lignin content less than 1%. The measured lignin content correlated linearly with the kappa number. The lignin content (% on pulp) equaled 0.15κ+0.16. The constant 0.16 was presumably caused by the incomplete oxidation of the lignin in the kappa number determination. Klason lignin or total lignin determinations were not accurate for these kinds of pulps. Hexenuronic acid content was simultaneously determined from the UVRR band height of unsaturated C˭O and C˭C structures. The linear correlation of this band with hexenuronic acid indicated that the content of other unsaturated structures was constant in all the pulps, was proportional to the hexenuronic acid content of the pulps, or was insignificantly low. When compared to conventional methods, the UVRR spectroscopic method is fast, requires little sample and pretreatment, and the procedure has good repeatability. In addition, the accuracy of this technique increases with decreasing lignin content (<1%) making it a very attractive method for bleaching studies.


Vibrational Spectroscopy | 2005

Development of the partial least squares models for the interpretation of the UV resonance Raman spectra of lignin model compounds

Anna-Maija Saariaho; Dimitris S. Argyropoulos; Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Tapani Vuorinen


Cellulose | 2005

On the Nature of Carbonyl Groups in Cellulosic Pulps

Antje Potthast; Thomas Rosenau; Paul Kosma; Anna-Maija Saariaho; Tappani Vuorinen


Journal of Pulp and Paper Science | 2003

Simultaneous quantification of residual lignin and hexenuronic acid from chemical pulps with UV resonance Raman spectroscopy and multivariate calibration

Anna-Maija Saariaho; Bo Hortling; Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Tarja Tamminen; Tapani Vuorinen


Archive | 2005

Resonance Raman spectroscopy in the analysis of residual lignin and other unsaturated structures in chemical pulps

Anna-Maija Saariaho


Archive | 2006

Kerr Gated Resonance Raman Spectroscopic Studies on the Photochemistry of Papers and Prints

Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Katri Vikman; Anna-Maija Saariaho; Jouko Vyörykkä; Tapani Vuorinen; Pavel Matousek; Anthony W. Parker


Archive | 2003

Characterization of residual lignin structures by UV resonance Raman spectroscopy and the possibilities of Raman spectroscopy in the visible region with Kerr-gated fluorescence rejection

Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen; Anna-Maija Saariaho; Pavel Matousek; Anthony W. Parker; Michael Towrie; Tapani Vuorinen

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Anna-Stiina Jääskeläinen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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Mari Nuopponen

Helsinki University of Technology

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Anthony W. Parker

Science and Technology Facilities Council

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Pavel Matousek

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Katri Vikman

Helsinki University of Technology

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Tappani Vuorinen

Helsinki University of Technology

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Tarja Tamminen

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland

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