| Literature DB >> 35743188 |
Zhongyu Qi1,2, Baiwang Wang1,2, Ce Sun1,2, Minghui Yang1,2, Xiaojian Chen1,2, Dingyuan Zheng1,2, Wenrui Yao1,2, Yang Chen1,2, Ruixiang Cheng1,2, Yanhua Zhang1,2.
Abstract
In recent years, under the pressure of resource shortage and white pollution, the development and utilization of biodegradable wood-plastic composites (WPC) has become one of the hot spots for scholars' research. Here, corn straw fiber (CSF) was chosen to reinforce a poly(lactic acid) (PLA) matrix with a mass ratio of 3:7, and the CSF/PLA composites were obtained by melt mixing. The results showed that the mechanical properties of the corn straw fiber core (CSFC) and corn straw fiber skin (CSFS) loaded PLA composites were stronger than those of the CSFS/PLA composites when the particle size of CSF was low. The tensile strength and bending strength of CSFS/CSFC/PLA are 54.08 MPa and 87.24 MPa, respectively, and the elongation at break is 4.60%. After soaking for 8 hours, the water absorption of CSF/PLA composite reached saturation. When the particle size of CSF is above 80 mesh, the saturated water absorption of the material is kept below 7%, and CSF/PLA composite has good hydrophobicity, which is mainly related to the interfacial compatibility between PLA and CSF. By observing the microstructure of the cross section of the CSF/PLA composite, the research found that the smaller the particle size of CSF, the smoother the cross section of the composite and the more unified the dispersion of CSF in PLA. Therefore, exploring the composites formed by different components of CSF and PLA can not only expand the application range of PLA, but also enhance the application value of CSF in the field of composites.Entities:
Keywords: composite material; corn straw fiber core; corn straw fiber skin; poly(lactic acid)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35743188 PMCID: PMC9224457 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23126746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1The appearance of CSF, CSFS and CSFC.
Figure 2Tensile strength and elongation at break of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (a) and CSFS/PLA composites (b) with different particle sizes; bending strength of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (c) and CSFS/PLA composites (d) with different particle sizes.
Figure 3FT-IR spectra of PLA before and after mixing with CSF with different components.
Figure 4The contact angle change picture of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (a–d), CSFS/PLA composites (e–h), CSFC/PLA composites (i) with different particle sizes and PLA sample (j).
Figure 5Changes in water absorption curves of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (a) and CSFS/PLA composites (b) within 18 days with different particle sizes; saturated water absorption of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (c) and CSFS/PLA composites (d) with different particle sizes.
Figure 6TGA and DTG curves of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (a,b) and CSFS/PLA composites (c,d) with different particle sizes.
Figure 7DSC curves of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites (a) and CSFS/PLA composites (b) with different particle sizes.
Characteristic DSC parameters of CSFS/CSFC/PLA composites and CSFS/PLA composites with different particle sizes.
| Sample | ∆ | ∆ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLA | 59.08 | 104.04 | 169.01 | 13.60 | 29.80 | 24.70 |
| CSFS/CSFC 40 mesh | 55.26 | 104.34 | 167.10 | 9.20 | 26.90 | 26.99 |
| CSFS/CSFC 40–80 mesh | 54.54 | 100.14 | 166.28 | 10.80 | 27.30 | 25.16 |
| CSFS/CSFC 80–120 mesh | 53.56 | 100.04 | 164.24 | 13.10 | 28.50 | 23.48 |
| CSFS/CSFC >120 mesh | 52.67 | 94.60 | 163.25 | 9.60 | 30.60 | 32.02 |
| CSFS 40 mesh | 56.67 | 99.16 | 165.46 | 5.30 | 28.70 | 35.68 |
| CSFS 40–80 mesh | 53.62 | 97.21 | 163.44 | 9.60 | 26.60 | 25.92 |
| CSFS 80–120 mesh | 52.26 | 94.57 | 162.29 | 9.90 | 27.30 | 26.53 |
| CSFS >120 mesh | 51.49 | 89.97 | 161.73 | 8.60 | 26.80 | 27.75 |
Figure 8SEM images for the fracture section of CSF/PLA composites with different particle sizes: (a) 40 mesh CSFS/CSFC/PLA, (b) 40–80 mesh CSFS/CSFC/PLA, (c) 80–120 mesh CSFS/CSFC/PLA, (d) >120 mesh CSFS/CSFC/PLA, (e) 40 mesh CSFS/PLA, (f) 40–80 mesh CSFS/PLA, (g) 80–120 mesh CSFS/PLA, (h) >120 mesh CSFS/PLA, (i) CSFC/PLA.
CSF with different components and particle sizes.
| Sample | CSF (Mesh) | CSFS (Mesh) | CSFC (Mesh) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 20–40 | - | - |
| 2 | 40–80 | - | - |
| 3 | 80–120 | - | - |
| 4 | >120 | - | - |
| 5 | - | 40 | - |
| 6 | - | 40–80 | - |
| 7 | - | 80–120 | - |
| 8 | - | >120 | - |
| 9 | - | - | 40–120 |
Figure 9The appearance of different PLA composites.