4.6 Article

Recycling of Pineapple Leaf and Cotton Waste Fibers into Heat-insulating and Flexible Cellulose Aerogel Composites

Journal

JOURNAL OF POLYMERS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 1112-1121

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10924-020-01955-w

Keywords

Pineapple leaf fibers; Cotton waste; Aerogel composite; Thermal insulation; Mechanical strength

Funding

  1. Science and Technology Program for sustainable development of the Mekong Delta [KHCN-TNB.DT/14-19/C35]

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In this study, pineapple leaf fibers and cotton waste fibers were combined for the first time to produce thermal insulating and flexible cellulose-based aerogel composites. The composites exhibited outstanding heat insulation and mechanical strength, showing great potential for practical insulation applications.
Pineapple leaf and cotton waste fibers known as abundant by-products in the agriculture and textile industry are combined for the first time to produce thermal insulating and flexible cellulose-based aerogel composites via an environmentally friendly and cost-effective freeze-drying process. The effect of total fiber content and the ratio of pineapple leaf fibers (PF) to cotton waste fibers (CF) on the density, porosity, morphology, durability, and thermal properties of aerogel composites are comprehensively investigated. The as-fabricated aerogel composites show an exceedingly low density of 0.019-0.046 g cm(-3) with high porosity of more than 96%. Because of the porous structure inside, our aerogel composites exhibit outstanding heat insulation with extraordinarily low thermal conductivity of 0.039-0.043 W m(-1) K-1 that is comparable to commercial insulation materials (mineral wool, fiberglass, polystyrene) and previous cellulose-based aerogels from recycled cellulose fibers, sugarcane bagasse, and rice straw. Interestingly, the combination of those fibers has remarkably improved the flexibility of our previous aerogels from pineapple leaf fibers only, in particular, the compressive modulus of aerogel composites (11.33-44.63 kPa) is 6 times higher than that of PF aerogels (5.73 kPa). The sheet of aerogel composite with a dimension of 28 x 28 cm which is rolled up shows no crack on its surface, demonstrating its excellent mechanical strength. The research results increase the possibility of applying the developed aerogel composites from biomass into practical insulation. Graphic

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