4.7 Article

Thermoplastic and biodegradable sugarcane lignin-based biocomposites prepared via a wholly solvent-free method

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 386, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.135834

Keywords

Sugarcane lignin; Solvent-free method; Thermoplasticization; Biodegradation; Reactive extrusion; Biocomposites

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This study presents a solvent-free method for preparing sugarcane lignin-based biocomposites with exceptional thermoplasticity, reasonable mechanical properties, acceptable hydrophobicity, and considerable biodegradability, even with lignin content exceeding 60 wt%. The thermoplasticization mechanism of these biocomposites was extensively studied. The developed sugarcane lignin-based biocomposites show optimal tensile strength, hardness, shape stability after water soaking, thermoplasticization temperature, and on-set thermal decomposition temperature of about 14 MPa, 75 D, 99%, 110 degrees C, and 245 degrees C, respectively. These biocomposites have great potential in replacing unsustainable and non-degradable daily use products such as polyethylene-based containers, packaging materials, decoration materials, and furniture.
It is still a huge challenge to obtain thermoplastic lignin-based biocomposites with reasonable thermoplasticity so long as the lignin ratio surpasses 50 wt% due to their theoretically higher thermoplasticization activation en-ergies in comparison with the corresponding decomposition energies. Herein, we report a completely solvent-free method to prepare a series of sugarcane lignin-based biocomposites with exceptional thermoplasticity, reason-able mechanical property, acceptable hydrophobicity, and considerable biodegradability even though the lignin content exceeds 60 wt%. Thermoplasticization mechanism of related biocomposites was extensively studied. The prepared lignin-based biocomposites show the optimal tensile strength, Shore hardness, shape stability after soaking in water, thermoplasticization temperature, and on-set thermal decomposition temperature of about 14 MPa, 75 D, 99%, 110 degrees C, and 245 degrees C, respectively. The developed sugarcane lignin-based biocomposites show large potential applications in replacing some unsustainable and undegradable products for daily use such as polyethylene-based containers, packaging materials, decoration materials, and even furniture.

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