How about a "solvent" that self-destructs? e.g. conc. H2O2? Would it oxidize it away.
PS. I know its unsafe and unpractical but just wondering.
It would be strange to use a
piranha solution to oxidize something which could be simply combusted much more easily.
Given the large amount of material you would have problems managing the reactants.
Water from the cellulose and H2O2 would rapidly dilute the solution, making it ineffective.
If you don't remove this water you will very quickly have to match each bit of cellulose with more and more reactants.
Cellulose is half water by weight so in the end you would have the same order of magnitude of liquid product as the cellulose you started with.
So you would probably want to remove the water.
So now we have large amounts of a nearly a boiling piranha solution but that is alright because we clearly have a death wish if we have made it this far.
'Fortunately' we won't need the bunsen burner as the decomposition is
more than exothermic enough.
Indeed we will have to make sure we only add our boxes every so often or risk thermal run-away.
So perhaps with painstaking management of heat, water, and at least as much hydrogen peroxide as cellulose you could make the cardboard disappear.
Oh yeah, unless you get the oxygen from the air you will need to provide a fair weight of oxidizing reagent.
This is a fair part of the reason rockets are so derned heavy.
It is so much nicer and cheaper when you can just use the abundant oxygen that is already in the air.
If you are a particularly curious cat you might look into electro-Fenton water treatment.