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Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)

The effect of four lignocellulosic waste fillers on the thermal and mechanical properties of biocomposites was investigated. Powdered licorice root, palm leaf, holm oak and willow fillers were melt compounded with polypropylene at two different weight contents, i.e., 10 and 30, and then injection mo...

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Autores principales: Gabrielli, Serena, Caviglia, Miriam, Pastore, Genny, Marcantoni, Enrico, Nobili, Francesco, Bottoni, Luca, Catorci, Andrea, Bavasso, Irene, Sarasini, Fabrizio, Tirillò, Jacopo, Santulli, Carlo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9607560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297926
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14204348
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author Gabrielli, Serena
Caviglia, Miriam
Pastore, Genny
Marcantoni, Enrico
Nobili, Francesco
Bottoni, Luca
Catorci, Andrea
Bavasso, Irene
Sarasini, Fabrizio
Tirillò, Jacopo
Santulli, Carlo
author_facet Gabrielli, Serena
Caviglia, Miriam
Pastore, Genny
Marcantoni, Enrico
Nobili, Francesco
Bottoni, Luca
Catorci, Andrea
Bavasso, Irene
Sarasini, Fabrizio
Tirillò, Jacopo
Santulli, Carlo
author_sort Gabrielli, Serena
collection PubMed
description The effect of four lignocellulosic waste fillers on the thermal and mechanical properties of biocomposites was investigated. Powdered licorice root, palm leaf, holm oak and willow fillers were melt compounded with polypropylene at two different weight contents, i.e., 10 and 30, and then injection molded. A commercially available maleated coupling agent was used to improve the filler/matrix interfacial adhesion at 5 wt.%. Composites were subjected to chemical (FTIR-ATR), thermal (TGA, DSC, DMA) and mechanical (tensile, bending and Charpy impact) analyses coupled with a morphological investigation by scanning electron microscopy. Although similarities among the different formulations were noted, holm oak fillers provided the best combination of thermal and mechanical performance. In particular, at 30 wt.% content with coupling agent, this composite formulation displayed remarkable increases in tensile strength and modulus, flexural strength and modulus, of 28% and 110%, 58% and 111%, compared to neat PP, respectively. The results imply that all these lignocellulosic waste fillers can be used successfully as raw materials for biocomposites, with properties comparable to those featured by other natural fillers.
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spelling pubmed-96075602022-10-28 Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP) Gabrielli, Serena Caviglia, Miriam Pastore, Genny Marcantoni, Enrico Nobili, Francesco Bottoni, Luca Catorci, Andrea Bavasso, Irene Sarasini, Fabrizio Tirillò, Jacopo Santulli, Carlo Polymers (Basel) Article The effect of four lignocellulosic waste fillers on the thermal and mechanical properties of biocomposites was investigated. Powdered licorice root, palm leaf, holm oak and willow fillers were melt compounded with polypropylene at two different weight contents, i.e., 10 and 30, and then injection molded. A commercially available maleated coupling agent was used to improve the filler/matrix interfacial adhesion at 5 wt.%. Composites were subjected to chemical (FTIR-ATR), thermal (TGA, DSC, DMA) and mechanical (tensile, bending and Charpy impact) analyses coupled with a morphological investigation by scanning electron microscopy. Although similarities among the different formulations were noted, holm oak fillers provided the best combination of thermal and mechanical performance. In particular, at 30 wt.% content with coupling agent, this composite formulation displayed remarkable increases in tensile strength and modulus, flexural strength and modulus, of 28% and 110%, 58% and 111%, compared to neat PP, respectively. The results imply that all these lignocellulosic waste fillers can be used successfully as raw materials for biocomposites, with properties comparable to those featured by other natural fillers. MDPI 2022-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9607560/ /pubmed/36297926 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14204348 Text en © 2022 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
Gabrielli, Serena
Caviglia, Miriam
Pastore, Genny
Marcantoni, Enrico
Nobili, Francesco
Bottoni, Luca
Catorci, Andrea
Bavasso, Irene
Sarasini, Fabrizio
Tirillò, Jacopo
Santulli, Carlo
Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title_full Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title_fullStr Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title_full_unstemmed Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title_short Chemical, Thermal and Mechanical Characterization of Licorice Root, Willow, Holm Oak, and Palm Leaf Waste Incorporated into Maleated Polypropylene (MAPP)
title_sort chemical, thermal and mechanical characterization of licorice root, willow, holm oak, and palm leaf waste incorporated into maleated polypropylene (mapp)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9607560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36297926
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14204348
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