Cargando…
The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding
Biobased HDPE (bioHDPE) was melt-compounded with different percentages (2.5 to 40.0 wt.%) of short hemp fibers (HF) as a natural reinforcement to obtain environmentally friendly wood plastic composites (WPC). These WPC were melt-compounded using a twin-screw extrusion and shaped into standard sample...
Autores principales: | , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8747228/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35012159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14010138 |
_version_ | 1784630782557421568 |
---|---|
author | Dolçà, Celia Fages, Eduardo Gonga, Eloi Garcia-Sanoguera, David Balart, Rafael Quiles-Carrillo, Luis |
author_facet | Dolçà, Celia Fages, Eduardo Gonga, Eloi Garcia-Sanoguera, David Balart, Rafael Quiles-Carrillo, Luis |
author_sort | Dolçà, Celia |
collection | PubMed |
description | Biobased HDPE (bioHDPE) was melt-compounded with different percentages (2.5 to 40.0 wt.%) of short hemp fibers (HF) as a natural reinforcement to obtain environmentally friendly wood plastic composites (WPC). These WPC were melt-compounded using a twin-screw extrusion and shaped into standard samples by injection molding. To improve the poor compatibility between the high non-polar BioHDPE matrix and the highly hydrophilic lignocellulosic fibers, a malleated copolymer, namely, polyethylene-graft-maleic anhydride (PE-g-MA), was used. The addition of short hemp fibers provided a remarkable increase in the stiffness that, in combination with PE-g-MA, led to good mechanical performance. In particular, 40 wt.% HF drastically increased the Young’s modulus and impact strength of BioHDPE, reaching values of 5275 MPa and 3.6 kJ/m(2), respectively, which are very interesting values compared to neat bioHDPE of 826 MPa and 2.0 kJ/m(2). These results were corroborated by dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) results, which revealed a clear increasing tendency on stiffness with increasing the fiber loading over the whole temperature range. The crystal structure was not altered by the introduction of the natural fibers as could be seen in the XRD patterns in which mainly the heights of the main peaks changed, and only small peaks associated with the presence of the fiber appeared. Analysis of the thermal properties of the composites showed that no differences in melting temperature occurred and the non-isothermal crystallization process was satisfactorily described from the combined Avrami and Ozawa model. As for the thermal degradation, the introduction of HF resulted in the polymer degradation taking place at a higher temperature. As for the change in color of the injected samples, it was observed that the increase in fiber generated a clear modification in the final shades of the pieces, reaching colors very similar to dark woods for percentages higher than 20% HF. Finally, the incorporation of an increasing percentage of fibers also increased water absorption due to its lignocellulosic nature in a linear way, which drastically improved the polarity of the composite. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8747228 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-87472282022-01-11 The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding Dolçà, Celia Fages, Eduardo Gonga, Eloi Garcia-Sanoguera, David Balart, Rafael Quiles-Carrillo, Luis Polymers (Basel) Article Biobased HDPE (bioHDPE) was melt-compounded with different percentages (2.5 to 40.0 wt.%) of short hemp fibers (HF) as a natural reinforcement to obtain environmentally friendly wood plastic composites (WPC). These WPC were melt-compounded using a twin-screw extrusion and shaped into standard samples by injection molding. To improve the poor compatibility between the high non-polar BioHDPE matrix and the highly hydrophilic lignocellulosic fibers, a malleated copolymer, namely, polyethylene-graft-maleic anhydride (PE-g-MA), was used. The addition of short hemp fibers provided a remarkable increase in the stiffness that, in combination with PE-g-MA, led to good mechanical performance. In particular, 40 wt.% HF drastically increased the Young’s modulus and impact strength of BioHDPE, reaching values of 5275 MPa and 3.6 kJ/m(2), respectively, which are very interesting values compared to neat bioHDPE of 826 MPa and 2.0 kJ/m(2). These results were corroborated by dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) results, which revealed a clear increasing tendency on stiffness with increasing the fiber loading over the whole temperature range. The crystal structure was not altered by the introduction of the natural fibers as could be seen in the XRD patterns in which mainly the heights of the main peaks changed, and only small peaks associated with the presence of the fiber appeared. Analysis of the thermal properties of the composites showed that no differences in melting temperature occurred and the non-isothermal crystallization process was satisfactorily described from the combined Avrami and Ozawa model. As for the thermal degradation, the introduction of HF resulted in the polymer degradation taking place at a higher temperature. As for the change in color of the injected samples, it was observed that the increase in fiber generated a clear modification in the final shades of the pieces, reaching colors very similar to dark woods for percentages higher than 20% HF. Finally, the incorporation of an increasing percentage of fibers also increased water absorption due to its lignocellulosic nature in a linear way, which drastically improved the polarity of the composite. MDPI 2021-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8747228/ /pubmed/35012159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14010138 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Dolçà, Celia Fages, Eduardo Gonga, Eloi Garcia-Sanoguera, David Balart, Rafael Quiles-Carrillo, Luis The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title | The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title_full | The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title_fullStr | The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title_full_unstemmed | The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title_short | The Effect of Varying the Amount of Short Hemp Fibers on Mechanical and Thermal Properties of Wood–Plastic Composites from Biobased Polyethylene Processed by Injection Molding |
title_sort | effect of varying the amount of short hemp fibers on mechanical and thermal properties of wood–plastic composites from biobased polyethylene processed by injection molding |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8747228/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35012159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14010138 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dolcacelia theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT fageseduardo theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT gongaeloi theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT garciasanogueradavid theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT balartrafael theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT quilescarrilloluis theeffectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT dolcacelia effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT fageseduardo effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT gongaeloi effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT garciasanogueradavid effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT balartrafael effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding AT quilescarrilloluis effectofvaryingtheamountofshorthempfibersonmechanicalandthermalpropertiesofwoodplasticcompositesfrombiobasedpolyethyleneprocessedbyinjectionmolding |