| Literature DB >> 35056741 |
Beatriz Adriana Salazar-Cruz1, María Yolanda Chávez-Cinco1, Ana Beatriz Morales-Cepeda1, Claudia Esmeralda Ramos-Galván1, José Luis Rivera-Armenta1.
Abstract
The purpose of the present work was to prepare polypropylene (PP) matrix composited filled with chemically treated pistachio shell particles (PTx), and evaluate their effect on the composites' thermal properties. PP-PTx composites were formulated in different PTx content (from 2 to 10 phr) in a mixing chamber, using the melt-mixing process. The PTx were chemically treated using a NaOH solution and infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). According to thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), the treatment of pistachio shell particles resulted in the remotion of lignin and hemicellulose. The thermal stability was evaluated by means of TGA, where the presence of PTx in composites showed a positive effect compared with PP pristine. Thermal properties such as crystallization temperature (Tc), crystallization enthalpy (∆Hc), melting temperature (Tm) and crystallinity were determinate by means differential scanning calorimetry (DSC); these results suggest that the PTx had a nucleation effect on the PP matrix, increasing their crystallinity. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) showed that stiffness of the composites increase compared with that PP pristine, as well as the storage modulus, and the best results were found at a PTx concentration of 4 phr. At higher concentrations, the positive effect decreased; however, they were better than the reference PP.Entities:
Keywords: chemical treatment; crystallinity; pistachio shell particles; thermal stability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35056741 PMCID: PMC8780289 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27020426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1TGA thermogram of pistachio shell particles without and treated chemically (PTx) (a), and derivative thermogravimetric (DTG) curve (b).
Figure 2FTIR spectra for Pistachio and Pistachio treated (PTx).
Figure 3TGA thermogram of PP and PP-PTx composites.
Figure 4DTG thermogram of PP and PP-PTx composites.
Figure 5DSC thermogram of PP in a heating–cooling–heating cycle.
Data obtained from DSC analysis for PP-PTx composites.
| Sample | Tc, °C | ∆Hc, J/g | Tm, °C | ∆Hm, J/g | %C |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PP | 123 | 99.87 | 174 | 78.14 | 37.74 |
| PP-2PTx | 124 | 98.45 | 177 | 83.49 | 40.33 |
| PP-4-PTx | 123 | 100.03 | 180 | 81.66 | 39.45 |
| PP-6PTx | 123 | 94.26 | 181 | 85.6 | 41.35 |
| PP-8PTx | 123 | 94.89 | 180 | 77.82 | 37.58 |
| PP-10PTx | 124 | 78.45 | 179 | 64.76 | 31.28 |
Figure 6DMA thermogram of Storage Modulus for PP and PP-PTx composites.
Figure 7DMA thermogram of Tan δ for PP and PP-PTx composites.