4.7 Article

Composites made of Ginkgo biloba fibers and polylactic acid exhibit non-isothermal crystallization kinetics

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DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.127232

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Polylactic acid (PLA); Blends; Melt blending; Crystallization kinetics; Crystallization activation energy

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This study investigates the crystallization kinetics of GF/PLA composites by melt blending GFs and PLA. The results show that the presence of GFs significantly promotes PLA crystallization, accelerates the crystallization rate, and shortens the crystallization time. Additionally, the calculation of crystallization activation energy indicates that GFs enhance the crystallization capacity and decrease the effective potential barrier of the composite.
Polymer crystallization affects material microstructure and the final product quality, and the crystallization kinetics that govern this process are critical. In this study, alkali-treated Ginkgo biloba fibers (GFs) were melt blended with polylactic acid (PLA) to obtain GF/PLA blends. The non-isothermal crystallization kinetics of the GF/PLA composites were subsequently investigated using the Avrami, Jeziorny, Ozawa, and Liu-Mo methods, and the crystallization activation energies of the systems were calculated by Kissinger and Friedman models. The results showed that the GFs significantly promoted PLA crystallization, accelerated the crystallization rate, and shortened the crystallization time. The Avrami method showed some deviation from the linear relationship due to the effect of secondary crystallization, while the numeric value obtained by the Jeziorny method increased with the cooling rate. The Ozawa method could only be used in a very narrow range of temperatures, while the Liu-Mo method showed a more desirable fit. Crystallization activation energy calculations showed that the GFs promoted an increase in the crystallization capacity of the blend and a decrease in the effective potential barrier. This resulted in more selective biocomposites than pure PLA, offering greater applicability in domains including tissue engineering and 3D printing.

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