4.6 Article

Bio-Composites for Structural Applications: Poly-L-Lactide Reinforced with Long Sisal Fiber Bundles

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE
Volume 131, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/app.40999

Keywords

biopolymers and renewable polymers; cellulose and other wood products; composites; mechanical properties; morphology

Funding

  1. BRE Trust

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Fully bio-based and biodegradable composites were compression molded from unidirectionally aligned sisal fiber bundles and a polylactide polymer matrix (PLLA). Caustic soda treatment was employed to modify the strength of sisal fibers and to improve fiber to matrix adhesion. Mechanical properties of PLLA/sisal fiber composites improved with caustic soda treatment: the mean flexural strength and modulus increased from 279 MPa and 19.4 GPa respectively to 286 MPa and 22 GPa at a fiber volume fraction of V-f=0.6. The glass transition temperature decreased with increasing fiber content in composites reinforced with untreated sisal fibers due to interfacial friction. The damping at the caustic soda-treated fibers-PLLA interface was reduced due to the presence of transcrystalline morphology at the fiber to matrix interface. It was demonstrated that high strength, high modulus sisal-PLLA composites can be produced with effective stress transfer at well-bonded fiber to matrix interfaces. (C) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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