Moriyasu Murata
Kao Corporation
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Featured researches published by Moriyasu Murata.
Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society | 1991
Moriyasu Murata; Eiichi Hoshino; Michio Yokosuka; Akira Suzuki
Microscopic studies of naturally soiled cotton undershirts showed that there was sebum in the microscopic spaces in the interior of the cotton fibers. Ordinary detergents did not remove this soil satisfactorily, although they readily removed sebum on the exterior of the fibers. Alkaline cellulase, which was compatible with the alkaline ingredients of detergents and which interacted selectively with celluloses in interfiber space in the interior of fiber, effectively removed sebum soil in the interfiber spaces in the presence of usual detergent ingredients. The removal of soil by the hydrolysis of the amorphous regions of fibers with cellulase is a new detergent mechanism.
Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society | 1993
Moriyasu Murata; Eiichi Hoshino; Michio Yokosuka; Akira Suzuki
Sebum in naturally soiled cotton undershirt and oleic acid in artificially soiled cotton cloth, which entered interfiber space in the interior of cotton fibers were easily removed by alkaline cellulase fromBacillus sp., but only with difficulty by commonly used detergent ingredients such as surfactant and protease. Adsorption isotherms and the rate of hydrolysis of alkaline cellulase against insoluble cellulose powders revealed that the lower the relative crystallinity of cellulose powder, the more adsorptive alkaline cellulase became and the more hydrolysis was promoted. With alkaline cellulase, cotton having the highest relative crystallinity was adsorbed at pH 9 and 5°C, liberated a negligible small amount of reducing sugar at pH 9 and 40°C, and produced no changes in the degree of polymerization of cotton cellulose and in the tensile strength of cotton fabric at pH 9 and 30°C. On the other hand, differential scanning calorimetric studies revealed that under similar conditions even a small quantity of alkaline cellulase drastically reduced the amount of water bound to cellulose in cotton. Because water was bound only with hydroxy groups of cellulose molecules in the amorphous region of cotton fibers, it can be understood that soil entering the interfiber space of amorphous interlamellae in the interior of cotton fibers, was easily removed as the hydrated cellulose in the interlamellae was slightly hydrolyzed by alkaline cellulase. A new detergent mechanism is proposed.
Archive | 1983
Muthmi Kuroda; Moriyasu Murata; Tsunesi Takeda; Junich Tamura
Archive | 1987
Kozo Saito; Fumio Sai; Moriyasu Murata
Archive | 1987
Akira Suzuki; Susumu Ito; Kikuhiko Okamoto; Eiichi Hoshino; Michio Yokosuka; Moriyasu Murata
Archive | 1987
Akira Suzuki; Susumu Ito; Kikuhiko Okamoto; Eiichi Hoshino; Michio Yokosuka; Moriyasu Murata
Archive | 1976
Moriyasu Murata; Fumio Sai; Takashi Fujino
Archive | 1988
Masaki Tsumadori; Kazuo Shimizu; Junichi Inokoshi; Moriyasu Murata
Archive | 1987
Koichi Matsuda; Atsuo Nakae; Moriyasu Murata; Akira Suzuki
Archive | 1989
Akira Suzuki; Susumu Ito; Kikuhiko Okamoto; Eiichi Hoshino; Michio Yokosuka; Moriyasu Murata