Trehalose is chosen as a model molecule to investigate the dissolution mechanism of cellulose in NaOH/urea aqueous solution. The combination of neutron total scattering and empirical potential structure refinement yields the most probable all-atom positions in the complex
fluid and reveals the cooperative dynamic effects of NaOH, urea, and water molecules in the dissolution process. NaOH directly interacts with glucose rings by breaking the inter- and intra-molecular hydrogen bonding. Nat, thus, accumulates around electronegative oxygen
atoms in the hydration shell of trehalose. Its local concentration is thereby 2–9 times higher than that in the bulk fluid. Urea molecules are too large to interpenetrate into trehalose and too complex to form hydrogen bonds with trehalose. They can only participate in the formation of the hydration shell around trehalose via Nat bridging. As the main component in the complex fluid, water molecules have a disturbed tetrahedral structure in the presence of NaOH and urea. The structure of the mixed solvent does not change when it is cooled to 12 C. This indicates that the dissolution may be a dynamic process, i.e., a competition between hydration shell formation and inter-molecule hydrogen bonding determines its dissolution. We, therefore, predict that alkali with smaller ions, such as LiOH, has better solubility for cellulose.