| Literature DB >> 35012228 |
R A Ilyas1,2, M Y M Zuhri3,4, H A Aisyah3,4, M R M Asyraf5, S A Hassan2, E S Zainudin3,4, S M Sapuan3,4, S Sharma6,7, S P Bangar8, R Jumaidin9, Y Nawab10, A A M Faudzi11, H Abral12, M Asrofi13, E Syafri14, N H Sari15.
Abstract
Polylactic acid (PLA) is a thermoplastic polymer produced from lactic acid that has been chiefly utilized in biodegradable material and as a composite matrix material. PLA is a prominent biomaterial that is widely used to replace traditional petrochemical-based polymers in various applications owing environmental concerns. Green composites have gained greater attention as ecological consciousness has grown since they have the potential to be more appealing than conventional petroleum-based composites, which are toxic and nonbiodegradable. PLA-based composites with natural fiber have been extensively utilized in a variety of applications, from packaging to medicine, due to their biodegradable, recyclable, high mechanical strength, low toxicity, good barrier properties, friendly processing, and excellent characteristics. A summary of natural fibers, green composites, and PLA, along with their respective properties, classification, functionality, and different processing methods, are discussed to discover the natural fiber-reinforced PLA composite material development for a wide range of applications. This work also emphasizes the research and properties of PLA-based green composites, PLA blend composites, and PLA hybrid composites over the past few years. PLA's potential as a strong material in engineering applications areas is addressed. This review also covers issues, challenges, opportunities, and perspectives in developing and characterizing PLA-based green composites.Entities:
Keywords: natural fiber; polylactic acid; polylactic acid blends; polylactic acid composites
Year: 2022 PMID: 35012228 PMCID: PMC8747475 DOI: 10.3390/polym14010202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1The natural reinforcement constituents of green composites. (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Nagalakshmaiah et al. [23]).
Figure 2The biodegradable classification of polymers constituents in green composites. (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Karande et al. [24]).
Chemical composition (wt %) of some green fibers.
| Fiber | Cellulose | Hemicellulose | Lignin | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abaca | 62.5 | 21 | 12 | [ |
| Bagasse | 37 | 21 | 22 | [ |
| Banana | 62.5 | 12.5 | 7.5 | [ |
| Bamboo | 34.5 | 20.5 | 26 | [ |
| Coir | 36–43 | 0.15–0.25 | 41–45 | [ |
| Cotton | 93 | 3 | 0 | [ |
| Flax | 71–78.5 | 18.6–20.6 | 2.2 | [ |
| Hemp | 70.2–74.4 | 17.9–22.4 | 3.7–5.7 | [ |
| Jute | 61–72 | 13.6–20.4 | 12–13 | [ |
| Kenaf | 37–49 | 18–24 | 15–21 | [ |
| PALF | 68.5 | 18.8 | 6.04 | [ |
| Ramie | 68.6–76.2 | 13.1–16.7 | 0.6–0.7 | [ |
Mechanical properties of green fibers [35,53,54,55,56,57,58,59].
| Fiber | Density (g/cm3) | Specific Modulus | Tensile Strength (MPa) | Young’s Modulus (GPa) | Elongation at Break (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flax | 1.5 | 50 | 345–1100 | 27.6 | 2.7–3.2 |
| Pineapple | 1.53 | 40 | 170 | 1.44 | 14.5 |
| Hemp | 1.4 | 50 | 550–900 | 70 | 1.6 |
| Jute | 1.3–1.45 | 38 | 393–773 | 13–26.5 | 1.16–1.5 |
| Ramie | 1.0 | - | 400–938 | 61.4–128 | 1.2–3.8 |
| Sisal | 1.45 | 22 | 468–640 | 9.4–22 | 3–7 |
| Abaca | 1.5 | - | 857 | 41 | 1.10 |
| Cotton | 1.5–1.6 | - | 287–800 | 5.5–12.6 | 7–8 |
| Coir | 1.15 | - | 131–175 | 4–6 | 15–40 |
| E-glass | 2.6 | - | 1800–2700 | 73 | 2.5 |
| Kevlar | 1.4 | - | 2758 | 62 | 2.5–3.7 |
| Carbon | 1.8 | - | 3500–5000 | 260 | 1.4–1.8 |
Figure 3Number of research reports published since 1990 based on the Scopus search.
Figure 4Global PLA market forecast, 2011−2020. Source: Nova Institute, [62].
General physical and optical properties of commercial amorphous PLA [82,96,97,98].
| Characteristics | Unit | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Physical | ||
| Molecular weight | g/mol | 66,000 |
| Specific gravity | - | 1.27 |
| Solid density | g/cm3 | 1.252 |
| Melt density | g/cm3 | 1.073 |
| Tg | °C | 55 |
| Tm | °C | 165 |
| Specific heat (Cp) | J/kg °C | |
| 190 °C | 2060 | |
| 100 °C | 1955 | |
| 55 °C | 1590 | |
| Thermal conductivity | W/m °C | |
| 190 °C | 0.195 | |
| 109 °C | 0.197 | |
| 48 °C | 0.111 | |
| Optical | ||
| UV light transmission | ||
| 190 to 220 nm | <5% | |
| 225 to 250 nm | 85% | |
| >300 nm | 95% | |
| Visible light transmission | 95% | |
Mechanical properties of pure PLA.
| Mechanical Test | Parameter and Values | Ultimate Tensile Strength (MPa) | Elastic Modulus (MPa) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tensile | Layer height (0.2 mm) | 60.4 | 3480 | [ |
| Raster angle | 54.9 | 3336 | ||
| Tensile | Infill percentage | 62.5 | - | [ |
| Build orientation | 57.0 | - | ||
| Layer height | 57.0 | - | ||
| Tensile | Raster angle | 64.03 | 3600 | [ |
| Tensile | Raster angle | 38.65 | 1538 | [ |
| Tensile | Raster angle | 38.70 | 1538 | [ |
| Tensile | Layer thickness | 49.29 | 3497.63 | [ |
| Raster angle | 53.59 | 3388.57 | ||
| Number of shells | 50.67 | 3189.01 | ||
| Tensile | Layer height | 45.56 | 1125 | [ |
| Compression | Raster angle | - | 408–1018 | [ |
| Tensile | Layer thickness | 89.1 | 4409 | [ |
| Tensile | Build orientation | 66.96 | 1350 | [ |
| Tensile (quasi-static loading) | Raster angle | 45.8 | 3372 | [ |
Figure 5Glass transition and melting temperature of PLA with other thermoplastics. (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Tsuji and Ikada [95]).
Figure 6Glass transition temperature for PLAs of different L-contents as a function of molecular weight (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Naser et al. [123]).
Primary transition temperature of selected PLA copolymers [96].
| Copolymer Ratio | Glass Transition Temperature (°C) | Melting Temperature (°C) |
|---|---|---|
| 100/0 (L/D, L)-PLA | 63 | 178 |
| 95/5 (L/D, L)-PLA | 59 | 164 |
| 90/10 (L/D, L)-PLA | 56 | 150 |
| 85/15 (L/D, L)-PLA | 56 | 140 |
| 80/20 (L/D, L)-PLA | 56 | 125 |
Fabrication methods and processing parameters for PLA-based green composites.
| Fiber | Process | Temperature | Pressure | Time of Heating | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenaf | Wet impregnation method | Room temperature | Process under vacuum | No heating, 24 h drying | [ |
| Kenaf | Hot pressing | 160 °C | 10 MPa | 10 min | [ |
| Flax | Twin screw extrusion + injection molding | 250 °C | 70 MPa | - | [ |
| Chicken feather | Twin screw extrusion + injection molding | 180 °C | Screw speed—100 r/min | 10 min | [ |
| Bamboo | Twin-screw extrusion + injection molding | 180 °C | 50–60 MPa | - | [ |
| Bamboo | Compounding + injection molding | 170 °C | Screw speed—150 r/min | - | [ |
| Treated ramie | Two-roll plastics mill + hot pressing | 140–170 °C | 20 MPa | 4 min (hot press) | [ |
| Short ramie | Two-roll plastics mill + hot pressing | 140–170 °C | 5 MPa | 4 min (hot press) | [ |
| Ramie and jute | Two-roll plastics mill + hot pressing | 140–170 °C | 20 MPa (of hot press) | 4 min (hot press) | [ |
Mechanical properties of PLA-reinforced natural fibers.
| Fibers | Processing Technique | Mechanical Properties | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tensile Strength (MPa) | Tensile Modulus (GPa) | Flexural Strength (MPa) | Flexural Modulus (GPa) | Impact (kJ/m2) | |||
| Chicken feather | Extrusion + injection molding | 55 | 4.2 | - | - | - | [ |
| Ramie | Hot pressing | 52 | - | 105 | - | - | [ |
| Cotton | Compression molding | 39.2–43.2 | 3.607–4.877 | - | - | 24.3–33.1 | [ |
| Kenaf (70%) | Hot pressing | 223 | 32 | 254 | 35.5 | 8.2–10.8 | [ |
| Sugar beet pulp (10 wt %) | Compression molding | 37.0–38.0 | 1.0035–1.0825 | - | - | - | [ |
| Silk (5 wt %) | Injection molding | 62 | 4.2 | - | - | - | [ |
| Micro-fibrillated cellulose (10 wt %) | Direct mixing + compression | 75 | 4.7 | - | - | - | [ |
| Wood flour (30 wt %) | Injection molding | 56.45–60.11 | 5.68–6.76 | - | - | 35.96 | [ |
| Flax (30 wt %) | Solution casting + hot pressing | 21 | 0.137 | - | - | 9.58–12.68 | [ |
| Bamboo flour | Injection molding | 50 | - | - | - | - | [ |
| Chopped recycled newspaper cellulose fiber | Injection molding | 67.4–68.4 | 4.9–5.7 | 104.4–108 | 5.4 | 23.1–23.9 | [ |
| Coconut | Extrusion + compression molding | 64.24–71.74 | 2.22–2.52 | 101.6–104.2 | - | 80.14–82.6 | [ |
| Cordenka | Injection molding | 108 | 4.2 | - | - | 8.5 | [ |
| Abaca | Injection molding | 74 | 5.85 | 124 | 6.51 | 5.3 | [ |
| Man-made cellulose | Injection molding | 92 | 8.032 | 152 | 7.89 | 7.9 | [ |
| Corn stover + wheat straw + soy stalk | Extrusion + Injection molding | 58 | 5.55 | 80 | 6.9 | 23 | [ |
| Sisal | Injection molding | 23–23.6 | 3.43–3.57 | - | - | 3.25 | [ |
Figure 7Plot of coefficient of thermal expansion for pure PLA and CFF/PLA composites with different CFF contents. (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Cheng et al. [133]).
Figure 8Thermogravimetric curves as a function of temperature of pure PLA and CFF/PLA composites. (Reproduced with a copyright permission from Cheng et al. [133]).
Mechanical properties of PLA blend composites.
| Polymers | Fibers | Processing Technique | Mechanical Properties | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tensile Strength (MPa) | Tensile Modulus (GPa) | Flexural Strength (MPa) | Flexural Modulus (GPa) | Impact (kJ/m2) | ||||
| PLA/ABS | - | Injection molding | 37.3 | - | 45.6 | 1.96 | - | [ |
| PLA/ABS/SAN-GMA | - | Injection molding | 50.9 | - | 62.9 | 2.30 | - | [ |
| PLA/NBR19 | - | Melt blending | 49.63–51.57 | 2.65–3.15 | - | - | - | [ |
| PLA/NBR33 | - | Melt blending | 47.62–50.44 | 2.51–2.97 | - | - | - | [ |
| PLA/NBR51 | - | Melt blending | 44.74–49.92 | 2.71–3.23 | - | - | - | [ |
| PLA/PP | - | Melt blending | 33.71–35.09 | 1.93–2.03 | - | - | 7.8–8.6 | [ |
| PLA/PP/PTW | - | Melt blending | 37.53–38.27 | 2.20–2.50 | - | - | 32.8–34.6 | [ |
| PLA/PP | Cloisite 30B nanocomposites | Melt blending | 36.94–40.66 | 2.85–3.10 | - | - | 3.4–3.6 | [ |
| PLA/PP/PTW | Cloisite 30B nanocomposites | Melt blending | 39.15–39.45 | 2.50–2.61 | - | - | 4.3–4.9 | [ |
| PLA/PA | - | Melt blending | 47.0–49.0 | 1.20–1.40 | - | - | 166–276 | [ |
Figure 9The DSC cooling and second heating thermograms of the (a,b) aPLA/TPU and (c,d) scPLA/TPU blend systems processes [Reproduced with a copyright permission from Nofar et al. [190].
DSC cooling and DMA temperature sweep graphs results [190].
| Conditions | DSC | DMA | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooling (5 °C/min) | tan δ | ||||||
| Tc (°C) | Crystallization Heat Enthalpy (J/g) | Tg, PLA (°C) | Tg (°C) | Damping Factor (Energy Dissipation) | Storage Modulus at 30 °C (MPa) | Storage Modulus at 90 °C (MPa) | |
| aPLA | - | - | 51.2 | 72.2 | 0.084 | 1447 | 2.6 |
| aPLA/LH TPU | 84.1 | 0.6 | 50.8 | 71.4 | 0.069 | 1346 | 2.6 |
| aPLA/MH TPU | 103.3 | 1.8 | 50.8 | 71.8 | 0.060 | 1288 | 4.1 |
| aPLA/HH TPU | 116.5 | 1.6 | 51.4 | 71.1 | 0.075 | 1231 | 3.4 |
| aPLA/LH TPU | 82.5 | 1.2 | 51.5 | 71.1 | 0.063 | 1250 | 2.9 |
| aPLA/MH TPU | 104.0 | 2.1 | 50.4 | 71.1 | 0.068 | 1431 | 3.4 |
| aPLA/HH TPU | 115.1 | 2.5 | 51.5 | 71.5 | 0.063 | 1203 | 3.8 |
| scPLA | 102.0 | 4.5 | 56.5 | 75.9 | 0.080 | 1510 | 3.5 |
| scPLA/LH TPU | 98.2 | 21.8 | 54.2 | 75.2 | 0.075 | 1238 | 4.9 |
| scPLA/MH TPU | 99.7 | 20.7 | 54.9 | 75.7 | 0.065 | 1254 | 6.8 |
| scPLA/HH TPU | 99.1 | 20.0 | 54.6 | 74.5 | 0.058 | 1308 | 12.6 |
Mechanical properties of PLA hybrid composites.
| Polymers | Fibers | Processing Technique | Mechanical Properties | Impact | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tensile Strength (MPa) | Tensile modulus (GPa) | Flexural Strength (MPa) | Flexural Modulus (GPa) | |||||
| PLA | Banana/Sisal Fiber | Injection molding | 79.00 | 4.10 | 125.00 | 5.60 | 47.80 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Flax/Jute | Compression molding | 49.35 | 2.80 | 80.50 | 2.25 | 61.46 J/m | [ |
| PLA | Polycaprolactone/Oil Palm Mesocarp | Melt blending | 33.48 | 0.88 | 21.45 | 2.43 | 95.44 J/m | [ |
| PLA | Montmorillonite nanoclay/short kenaf | Double extrusion | 37.00 | 2.80 | 50.00 | 7.50 | 82.00 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Corn stover/wheat straw/soy stalks | Extrusion + injection molding | 58.00 | 5.55 | 80.00 | 6.90 | 23 J/m | [ |
| PLA | Hemp/Sisal | Injection molding | 46.25 | 6.10 | 94.83 | 6.04 | 10.29 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Coir/Pineapple leaf | Melt mixing | 18.00 | 5.00 | 33.00 | 5.00 | 4.3 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Banana/Kenaf | Molding | 50.00 | - | 61.00 | - | 16.00 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Cotton gin waste/flax | Extrusion + melt blending | - | - | 13.99 | 3.97 | - | [ |
| PLA | Bamboo/microfibrillated cellulose | Milling | - | 4.81 | 53.80 | - | - | [ |
| PLA | Hemp/yarn | Compression molding/prepreg | 62.00 | 6.50 | 122.00 | 9.00 | 25.00 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | MMT clay/aloe vera | Extrusion | 56.00 | 3.20 | 100.00 | 6.70 | 55.00 kJ/m2 | [ |
| PLA | Softwood flour/cellulose | Injection molding | 70.00 | 56.00 | - | - | - | [ |
Thermal properties of PLA hybrid composites.
| Polymers | Fibers | Processing Technique | Thermal Properties | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tm (°C) | Tg (°C) | ||||
| PLA | Coir/Pineapple leaf fiber | Melt blending | 290.07 | - | [ |
| PLA | PBSA/Starch | Extrusion | 165.35 | 54.01 | [ |
| PLA | Clay/RCF | Mold blending | 176.30 | - | [ |
| PLA | Hydroxyapatite/Membrane mat | Air jet spinning | 153.60 | 51.29 | [ |
| PLA | Graphene oxide/CNT | Solution casting | 154.00 | 57.70 | [ |
| PLA | Chitosan/Basalt | Reactive blending + injection molding | 158.01 | 63.32 | [ |
Figure 10MFI values of PLA and composites. (Copyright permission from Najah Eselini et al. [217].) MFI: melt flow index; PLA: poly (lactic acid); BF: basalt fiber; FF: flax fiber.