4.7 Article

Enhancing Sustainability: Jute Fiber-Reinforced Bio-Based Sandwich Composites for Use in Battery Boxes

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 15, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym15183842

Keywords

bio-based sandwich composites; composite laminate; jute fiber; plasma treatment; mechanical behavior

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The rising industrial demand for environmentally friendly and sustainable materials has led to increased research on natural fibers, particularly jute fibers. This study investigates the mechanical properties of plasma-treated jute composite laminates and the flexural behavior of jute fabric-reinforced sandwich composites. The results show that plasma treatment improves the mechanical properties of jute composites, and the flexural properties of jute sandwich composites can be enhanced by incorporating PET100 foams.
The rising industrial demand for environmentally friendly and sustainable materials has shifted the attention from synthetic to natural fibers. Natural fibers provide advantages like affordability, lightweight nature, and renewability. Jute fibers' substantial production potential and cost-efficiency have propelled current research in this field. In this study, the mechanical behavior (tensile, flexural, and interlaminar shear properties) of plasma-treated jute composite laminates and the flexural behavior of jute fabric-reinforced sandwich composites were investigated. Non-woven mat fiber (MFC), jute fiber (JFC), dried jute fiber (DJFC), and plasma-treated jute fiber (TJFC) composite laminates, as well as sandwich composites consisting of jute fabric bio-based unsaturated polyester (UPE) composite as facing material and polyethylene terephthalate (PET70 and PET100) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) as core materials were fabricated to compare their functional properties. Plasma treatment of jute composite laminate had a positive effect on some of the mechanical properties, which led to an improvement in Young's modulus (7.17 GPa) and tensile strength (53.61 MPa) of 14% and 8.5%, respectively, as well as, in flexural strength (93.71 MPa) and flexural modulus (5.20 GPa) of 24% and 35%, respectively, compared to those of JFC. In addition, the results demonstrated that the flexural properties of jute sandwich composites can be significantly enhanced by incorporating PET100 foams as core materials.

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