4.7 Review

Sustainable Materials Containing Biochar Particles: A Review

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym15020343

Keywords

biochar particles; sustainable materials; polymers; biopolymers; asphalts

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The thermochemical decomposition of polymer waste, food waste, and biomasses into fuels, syngas, and solid phase particles, known as char/biochar particles, has been extensively researched in the past two decades. Various thermochemical decomposition processes have been explored, producing char/biochar particles with different properties such as carbon-content, compositions, porosity, and adsorption ability. These particles have potential applications in agriculture as fertilizers and in water treatment, as well as high adsorption particles. They can also be used as fillers in polymers and biopolymers, improving their mechanical and fire resistance properties.
The conversion of polymer waste, food waste, and biomasses through thermochemical decomposition to fuels, syngas, and solid phase, named char/biochar particles, gives a second life to these waste materials, and this process has been widely investigated in the last two decades. The main thermochemical decomposition processes that have been explored are slow, fast, and flash pyrolysis, torrefaction, gasification, and hydrothermal liquefaction, which produce char/biochar particles that differ in their chemical and physical properties, i.e., their carbon-content, CHNOS compositions, porosity, and adsorption ability. Currently, the main proposed applications of the char/biochar particles are in the agricultural sector as fertilizers for soil retirement and water treatment, as well as use as high adsorption particles. Therefore, according to recently published papers, char/biochar particles could be successfully considered for the formulation of sustainable polymer and biopolymer-based composites. Additionally, in the last decade, these particles have also been proposed as suitable fillers for asphalts. Based on these findings, the current review gives a critical overview that highlights the advantages in using these novel particles as suitable additives and fillers, and at the same time, it shows some drawbacks in their use. Adding char/biochar particles in polymers and biopolymers significantly increases their elastic modulus, tensile strength, and flame and oxygen resistance, although composite ductility is significantly penalized. Unfortunately, due to the dark color of the char/biochar particles, all composites show brown-black coloration, and this issue limits the applications.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available