| Literature DB >> 35516598 |
Anqi Ji1, Shuyang Zhang2, Samarthya Bhagia3, Chang Geun Yoo1, Arthur J Ragauskas2,3,4.
Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) printing is an additive manufacturing technique with a wide range of 3D structure fabrication and minimal waste generation. Recently, lignocellulosic biomass and its derivatives have been used in 3D printing due to their renewable nature and sustainability. This review provides a summary of the development of different types of biomass and its components such as cellulose and lignin in 3D printing, brief data analysis and introduction to characterization methods of the 3D printed composites. Mechanical properties such as tensile properties, Izod impact properties, and flexural properties, thermal properties and morphological properties of 3D-printed composites are discussed. In addition, other available characterization methods of 3D-printed composites are reported. The future direction of biomass and its derivatives in the field of 3D printing is also discussed. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35516598 PMCID: PMC9054612 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra03620j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Number of patents for cellulose and biomass-derived in 3D printing.
Fig. 2(a) Mechanism of FDM/FFF. (b) “Printing zone” defined in an FDM printing (ABS, HIPS and NBR41–HW represent acrylonitrile–butadiene–styrene, high impact polystyrene and acrylonitrile butadiene rubber with 41 mol% of nitrile contents, respectively). Reprinted with copyright permission from ref. 25. Copyright 2018 Science Advances.
Fig. 3Mechanism of DIW.
Fig. 4Mechanism of SLA/DLP. Redrawn based on ref. 86. Copyright 2019 ACS Omega.
Fig. 5Mechanism of binder jetting.
Fig. 6(a) Schematic of the tree hierarchical structure illustrating the role of cellulose. Reprinted with permission from ref. 44. Copyright 2011 Chemical Society Reviews. (b) SEM image of the CNF, scale bar 6 μm. Reprinted with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 2019 Advanced Functional Materials. (c) TEM image of CNCs, scale bar 100 nm. Reprinted with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 2019 Advanced Functional Materials. (d) SEM image of BC produced by Komagataeibacter xylinus. Scale bar 5 μm. Reprinted with permission from ref. 46. Copyright 2017 RSC Advances.
3D printing of cellulose composites
| Species | Printing methods | Contents and sizes of the biomass | Form of printed samples | Applications | Other materials | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microfibrillated cellulose (MFC)/lignosulfonate (LS) | DIW | MFC: 0.5 wt%–11.4 wt%; | Hydrogel | Further carbonization for conductive materials |
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| LS: 20 wt%–50 wt% | ||||||
| CNF | 1.6 wt% | Hydrogel | Neural tissue engineering (NTE) | 0.4 wt% SWCNT (acidified) |
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| Hydrogel scaffold | Cell scaffolds | Waterborne PU |
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| 11.25 wt% | Aerogel | Triboelectric nanogenerator | PDMS, Ag paste |
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| CNF 1 wt% | Hydrogel | Bio-medical field | Galactoglucomannan methacrylates (GGMMAs) |
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| GGMMAs 1, 2, 3 wt% | ||||||
| 2 wt% | Hydrogel | Conductive hydrogel | CNTs |
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| CNF and xylan-tyramine (XT) | CNF < 1 wt% | Hydrogel | 4D printing | H2O2, horseradish peroxidase |
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| CNF/XT (xylan modified with tyramine) | <3wt% | Hydrogel and aerogel | Wound dressings, smart textiles, packaging, or soft robots |
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| CNF | Sensors | Nisopropylacrylamide |
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| Cellulose fiber | 50 wt%–89 wt% (<200 μm) | Bulk | Structural material | Chitosan (75–85% deacetylated) |
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| Bacterial cellulose nanofibrils (BCNF) | <1.4 wt% | Hydrogel | Tissue engineering | Silk fibroin, gelatin and genipin |
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| TEMPO–CNF | 2.8 wt% | Hydrogel | Oil/water separation, and electronic related applications | Kymene (0.06 wt%) |
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| TEMPO–CNF | Aerogel | Conductive material | CNT |
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| TEMPO–CNF | Hybrid fiber | Smart textiles | MXene |
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| CNC | <10 wt% | Hydrogel | Scaffold | Oxidized dextran (OD)/gelatin (GEL) |
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| 3, 5, 10, 20 wt% | Hydrogel | Scaffold | Gelatin |
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| 6 wt% | Hydrogel scaffolds | Bio- or medical application | Sodium alginate (SA), gelatin |
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| 20 wt% | Hydrogel | Rheology study |
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| CNC + CNF | Ion sensors | Ag nanowhisker |
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| Dialdehyde cellulose nanocrystals (DAC) | 5, 10, 20 wt% | Hydrogel | Tissue engineering | Gelatin |
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| Bacterial cellulose (BC) | 0–2.25 wt% | Hydrogel | Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine | Cu2+, alginate, |
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| CNC and BAPO modified CNC | DLP | <6.14 wt% | Hydrogel and aerogel | High mechanical performance aerogel | Pegmem, BAPO–ONa, |
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| CNC + TEMPO–CNF | DIW | >27.5 wt% total cellulose | Hydrogel and aerogel | High mechanical performance aerogel |
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| CNC | DCW | Overall solid 4 wt% in dispersion | Aerogel | Xyloglucan |
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| Various | Aerogel | Green materials | Xyloglucan, wood flour |
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| Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) | FDM | 1, 3, 5 wt% | Bulk | PLA |
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| CNF | 30 wt% | Bulk | PLA |
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| CNF | 30 wt% | Bulk | PP block copolymer |
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| CNC | 0.5, 1 wt% | Bulk | ABS |
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| CNC | <1 wt% | Bulk | ABS, methacrylate-based resin |
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| CNF ROP-grafted with PLA | 0, 1, 3 wt% | Bulk | PLA |
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| CNC-modified by silica sol | 1 wt% | Bulk | ABS, KH550 |
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| CNF grafted with PLA | CNF- | Bulk | PLA |
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| TEMPO–BC | 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5 wt% | Bulk | PLA |
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| Lignin-coated CNC (L-CNC) | SLA | <1 wt% | Bulk | MA |
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| CNC | 0.5, 1, 2, 4 wt% | Bulk | MA |
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| CNC | <1.2 wt% | Bulk | Medical industry | PEGDA, photoinitiator |
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| MMA-modified CNC | 0.5, 1, 2, 4 wt% | MMA |
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| CNC | DLP | 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2, 5 wt% | Bulk | Biomedical application | PEGDA, DiGlyDA, photoinitiator |
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| MCC | Cement printing | 0.5, 1, 1.5 wt% | Bulk | Cement materials | Cement |
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| Methyl cellulose (MC) | Ceramic printing | 0.25 wt% | Bulk | MC-assisted ceramic printing | Magnesium aluminate spinel |
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| Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) | FDM | 45 wt% | Bulk (low resolution) | Drug delivery | Theophylline, triacetin |
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| Hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) | Binder jetting | 10, 30, 50 wt% | Bulk | Drug delivery | Caffeine (medicine); magnesium stearate and colloidal silicone dioxide; 70 v/v% ethanol |
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| Ethyl cellulose (EC) | FDM | 50–80 wt% | Bulk | Drug delivery | Ibuprofen (medicine), release modifier (hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, sodium alginate, xanthan gum, polyvinyl alcohol) |
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| Hydroxyethyl cellulose (HEC) | DIW | 0.5–2.5 wt% | Bulk | Lignin, microcrystalline cellulose, citric acid |
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| CA | 25–35 wt% | Antimicrobial | Acetone |
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| CA (to cellulose) | <22 wt% | Hydrogel | Oil/water separation | Ethyl acetate |
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| Carboxymethylated hydrophilic CNF (Hphil-CNF) + methyltrimethoxysilaned hydrophobic CNF (Hphob-CNF) | Hydrogel | Bio-medical |
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| Carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) | Paste | Battery | Silver nano whisker |
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| Cellulose fiber (CF) and CMC | CF: 15–45 wt% | Between bulk and hydrogel |
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| CMC: 5–20 wt% |
Fig. 7Various studies on 3D printing of cellulose and cellulose derivates. (a) The alignment of cellulose nanofibers (CNF) and nanocrystals (CNC) controlled by the flow in a DIW printing (left), leading to a strong aerogel hook (right). Reprinted with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 2019 Advanced Functional Materials. (b) DCW printing of cellulose composites with other biomasses. Reprinted with permission from ref. 36. Copyright 2019 Advanced Materials Technologies. (c) Wood cell mimicking structure combined FDM printing structure with UV-cured resin and CNC. Reprinted with permission from ref. 67. Copyright 2018 Materials & Design. (d) SLA printing of CNC reinforced structure that can be used in medical fields. Reprinted with permission from ref. 39. Copyright 2017 ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. (e) MC-assisted ceramic slurry showed unique rheology behavior on printing. Below two images showed the prototype (left) and the sintered counterpart (right). Reprinted with permission from ref. 76. Copyright 2019 Journal of Alloys and Compounds. (f) CA-based oil/water separation mesh and its anti-oil-fouling property. Reprinted with permission from ref. 77. Copyright 2019 ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.
3D printing of lignin composites
| Biomass species | Printing methods | Highest contents of the biomass | Other materials | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lignin from spruce | FDM | 40 wt% | PLA |
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| Softwood kraft lignin | 3 wt% | PLA (matrix), TC (medicine) |
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| Lignin (from | 50 wt% | PHB |
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| Lignin | 20 wt% | PLA |
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| Kraft lignin, beech organosolv lignin and beech lignosulfonate | 15 wt% | PLA |
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| Organosolv hardwood lignin | 40 wt% | ABS, NBR41, carbon fiber |
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| Softwood kraft lignin; organosolv hardwood lignin | 60 wt% | ABS, NBR41, Nylon 12, carbon fiber |
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| Softwood kraft lignin | SLA | 1 wt% | Commercial methacrylate resin |
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| Organosolv lignin | 3 wt% | Polyurethane acrylate/morpholine/tripropylene glycol diacrylate |
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| Lignin modified by MA | 15 wt% | Ethoxylated pentaerythritol tetraacrylate/aliphatic urethane acrylate/urethane acrylate |
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Fig. 8Studies on lignin 3D printing. (a) FDM printing process of lignin-included composite that owns the highest reported lignin contents (60 wt%) and the printed oak leaf. Reprinted with permission from ref. 93 Copyright 2018 Science Advances. (b) SLA printing of lignin-included resin that showed an improvement of the tensile strength. Reprinted with permission from ref. 86. https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsomega.9b02455, Copyright 2019 ACS Omega. Further permissions related to the material excerpted should be directed to the ACS. (c) Modified lignin in SLA printing can be printed with the highest concentration of 15 wt%. Reprinted with permission from ref. 41. Copyright 2018 ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. Further permissions related to the material excerpted should be directed to the ACS.
3D printing of wood composites
| Species | Printing methods | Size of the biomass | Contents | Other materials | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wood chips/sawdust | LDM | 0.8–2 mm | Gypsum, methyl cellulose, sodium silicate and different types of cement |
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| Air-dry sawdust from beech and methylcellulose (MC) | ∼90 wt% wood | MC (as binder and lubrication) |
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| Beech wood powder | <0.237 mm | 13 wt%–25 wt% | PVAc and urea-formaldehyde |
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| Wood flour (poplar) | FDM | Sieve into 140–160 mesh | 30 wt% | Three types of plasticizer |
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| Wood-filled PLA | 30 wt% | PLA |
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| Wood fibre-filled PLA | 40 wt% | PLA |
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| Wood flour | 14 wt% | PLA |
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| Beech wood | 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 wt% | PLA |
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| Beech wood | 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 wt% | ABS and PLA |
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| Beech wood | 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 wt% | PLA |
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| Recycled pine wood | 30 wt% | PLA/PHA |
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| Wood-filled PLA | 30 wt% | PLA |
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| Wood flour | 30 wt% | PLA |
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| Wood-filled filament (commercial) | 30–40 wt% | PLA |
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| Pine powder, bleach pulp, mechanical pulp, newspaper pulp, eucalyptus powder | 4, 6, 10, 15, 20 wt% | PLA |
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| Wastepaper, cardboard, wood flour | <20 wt% | Recycled polypropylene, commercial PP |
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| Wood | 40 wt% | PLA, ceramic, metal, carbon fiber |
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| Recycled wood fiber | 15 wt% | PHA and PLA |
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| Commercial wood filament | Polymer resin |
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| Wood-filled PLA | 30 wt% | PLA |
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| Wood | 5 wt% | PLA |
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3D printing of other biomass composites
| Species | Printing methods | Contents | Form of products | Applications | Other materials | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starch | DIW (with mixing channel before the nozzle) | 7 wt% | Hydrogel | Customized healthy food | Water, bovine gelatin, sucrose, egg white protein |
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| Potato starch and | 3D food printing (DIW) | Potato starch (<0.48 wt%), | Hydrogel | Food printing | Water |
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| Starches (potato, rice, and corn) | Hot-extrusion 3D printing | <30 wt% | Hydrogel | Food printing |
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| Mashed potatoes and potato starch | 3D food printing | Mashed potato < 85 wt%; potato starch 15 wt% | Food printing | Trehalose |
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| Potato, wheat and corn starch | High-temperature food printing | 20 wt% | Food printing | Water |
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| Potato starch and pea protein | 3D food printing | Potato starch > 92 wt%; pea protein < 8 wt% | Food printing | Water |
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| Pregelatinized starch, microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) | Starch 46 wt%; MCC 5 wt% | Bulk | Drug and medicine | Warfarin sodium, |
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| Starch | DIW | Starch 71 wt%–75 wt% | Supporting materials in ceramic 3D printing | Polyvinylpyrrolidone |
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| Thermal plastic starch | FDM | 30 wt% | Bulk | Plasticizers; compatibilizer, impact modifier |
| |
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| DIW | <3 wt% | Bulk | Cementitious construction | Metakaolin, alkaline activator, bentonite |
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| Corn starch/CA (SCA) | FDM | 50 : 50 | Bulk | Medical devices |
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Mechanical properties of biomass-derived 3D printed products
| Materials | Young's modulus (MPa) | Tensile strength (MPa) | Tensile elongation (%) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA + softwood lignin (20–40%) | 1746–2843 | 27–46 | 1.5–2.0 |
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| Photo-curable polyurethane + organosolv lignin (0.2–3.0%) | 4–12 | 8–25 | — |
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| Photo-curable polyurethane + organosolv lignin/graphene (0.2–3.0%) | 4.5–13 | 8–28 | — | |
| Tetra-acrylate oligomer (33–38%) + aliphatic urethane acrylate (33–38%) + monofunctional urethane acrylate (16–19%) + hardwood lignin (5–15%) | 3500–6600 | — | — |
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| Alkali-treated bamboo fiber (ABF)/polypropylene (PP)/PLA | — | 21–38 | 10.6–14.2 |
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| Thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer (TPU)/wood flour (80 : 20 wt%) mixture + EPDM- | — | 13–17 | 205.2–591.2 |
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| Poly( | 1275–1888 | 23–47 | 2.2–3.3 |
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| Methacrylate (MA) + lignin-coated cellulose nanocrystals (L-CNC) | 610–1230 | 32–69 | 2.1–11.0 |
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| Thermoplastic starches (TPS)/acrylonitrile–butadiene–styrene (ABS) (30 : 70 wt%) mixture + styrene maleic anhydride (0–1%) + methyl-methacrylate butadiene styrene (0–2%) + TiO2 (0–5%) + carbon black (0–5%) | — | 34–49 | — |
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| PLA + bamboo fiber (20%) | — | 51 | 2.2 |
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| PLA + alkali-treated bamboo fiber (10–30%) | — | 57–66 | 6.0–8.5 | |
| PLA + lignin (5–15%) | 2280–2470 | 40–52 | 1.5–2.9 |
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| PLA + cellulose nanofibrils (10–50%) | 3000–9500 | 50–105 | 0.5–5.8 |
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| Cellulose acetate (CA) | 2000–2400 | 42–47 | — |
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| Nylon 12/hot water lignin (60 : 40 wt%) mixture + carbon fibers (0–16%) | 2000–7500 | 40–100 | — |
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Fig. 9TGA plots of lignin, PLA and PLA/lignin biocomposites. Reprinted with permission from ref. 87. Copyright 2019 Materials.
Fig. 10(a) DSC thermographs of PLA/lignin bulk composites. (b) DSC thermograph of the sample with 5 wt% lignin. Quantities for characterization of the glass transition of the sample containing 5 wt% lignin: extrapolated onset temperature (Tg), half-step temperature (Tg), change of the normalized heat capacity during the transition (ΔCp), initial (Tg) and final (Tg) temperatures of the glass transition. Reprinted with permission from ref. 140. Copyright 2017 Manufacturing Review.
Thermal properties of biomass-derived 3D printed products
| Materials | Glass transition temperature | Melting temperature | Crystallization temperature | Cold crystallization temperature | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA + softwood lignin (20–40%) | 59–71 | 179.2–186.6 | — | — |
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| PLA + microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) (1–5%) | ∼60 | 159–161 | — | 112–119 |
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| PLA + titanate coupling agent modified MCC (1–5%) | ∼59 | 159–160 | — | 107–115 | |
| PLA + lignin (5–15%) | 56–61 | 147–152 | — | 111–117 |
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| Polypropylene (22.5–56%) + PLA (22.5–52.5%) + maleated polypropylene (0–5%) + untreated bamboo fiber (20%) | — | 159 | 124 | — |
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| Polypropylene (22.5–56%) + PLA (22.5–52.5%) + maleated polypropylene (0–5%) + alkali-treated bamboo fiber (20%) | — | 157–167 | 121–127 | — | |
| Bamboo fiber/Polypropylene/PLA + alkali-treated bamboo fiber (10–30%) | — | 161–162 | 115–119 | — | |
| PLA + wood flour (5%) | 60 | 167 | — | 97 |
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| Poly ( | 57–64 | 161–170 | — | — |
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| Methacrylate (MA) + lignin-coated cellulose nanocrystals (L-CNC) | 82–101 | — | — | — |
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| Polypropylene (PP)/ | — | 147–151 | 109–113 | — |
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| PLA + cellulose nanofibrils (10–50%) | 58–60 | — | — | — |
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| Methacrylate (MA) + cellulose nanocrystal (0.5–4%) | 57.6–74.5 | — | — | — |
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Fig. 11Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of the fracture surface of tensile tested dogbones. Reprinted with permission from ref. 87. Copyright 2019 Materials.
Fig. 12Micrograph images of the fracture surface after tensile testing (a) photo-curable PU, (b) PU–graphene (PU–G), (c) PU-0.6% lignin/G, and (d) top surface of PU-0.6% lignin/G. Reprinted with permission from ref. 95. Copyright 2019 Polymers.
Fig. 13Light micrographs of (a) individual PLA fibers extruded from 0.2 mm nozzle 20 mm s−1 printing speed; (b) individual PLA blends with 5 wt% lignin fibers extruded from 0.2 mm nozzle 20 mm s−1 printing speed; (c and d) individual PLA blends with 5 wt% lignin fibers extruded from 0.2 mm nozzle 60 mm s−1 printing speed. Reprinted with permission from ref. 140. Copyright 2017 Manufacturing Review.