4.5 Article

Microwave Hybrid Heating for Moulding of Sisal/Jute/HDPE Composites

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL FIBERS
Volume 19, Issue 16, Pages 13524-13538

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15440478.2022.2100553

Keywords

Natural fibers; sisal fiber; jute fiber; thermoplastic polymer; polymer matrix composites; microwave processing

Funding

  1. Design Innovation Center (DIC) an initiative of Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India [DIC-1267-MID]

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Microwave processing of polymer composites is an alternative to traditional thermal processing techniques due to its faster and environment-friendly nature. In this study, HDPE composites reinforced with jute and sisal fibers (10 wt.%) were fabricated using microwave energy. Mechanical, thermogravimetric, and X-ray diffraction analyses were conducted to evaluate the performance of the composites. The results showed significant improvements in tensile strength, flexural strength, and crystallinity for the composites compared to pure HDPE.
Microwave processing of polymer composites is gaining attention as a viable alternative to traditional thermal processing techniques owing to several reasons, including faster and environment-friendly processing. In the present study, High-density polyethylene (HDPE) reinforced with jute and sisal fibers (10 wt.%) composites were fabricated using microwave energy at 2.45 GHz frequency. The mechanism of microwave molding of the composites has been explained. To understand and compare the performance of the fabricated composites, mechanical (tensile and flexural), thermogravimetric (TGA), and X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses were employed to evaluate the performance of the composites. The composites exhibited significant improvement in tensile strength (29.25% and 48.69%), flexural strength (19.22% and 27.47%), and crystallinity (6.41% and 13.02%) for HDPE/Jute and HDPE/Sisal, respectively while compared to pure HDPE. The fractography confirmed that the fiber pull-out was the major mechanism of failure of the composites under mechanical loading. The processing data show that the application of microwave energy is a potential method to process natural fiber-based polymeric composites in a relatively low processing time.

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