High-Strength Polylactic Acid (PLA) Biocomposites Reinforced by Epoxy-Modified Pine Fibers
Published: 2020
Publication Name: ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering
Publication URL: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acssuschemeng.0c03463
Abstract:
The stiffness and tensile strength of biopolymers (e.g., polylactic acid (PLA)) are less than desirable for load-bearing applications in their neat form. The use of natural fibers as reinforcements for composites (for large-scale three-dimensional (3D) printing) has expanded rapidly, attributable to their low weight, low cost, high stiffness, and renewable nature. Silane and acid/alkali are typically used to modify the surface of natural fibers to improve the fiber/polymer interfacial adhesion. In this study, a simple method of impregnation was developed to modify pine fibers (loblolly, mesh size of 90180 ?m, 30 wt %) with a solvent-borne epoxy to reinforce PLA. As a benefit of the epoxy modification (0.510 wt %), the tensile strengths and Youngs moduli of the epoxy-modified pine/PLA composites increased by up to 20 and 82%, respectively, as compared to that of neat PLA. The epoxy-modified pine/PLA composites, with an optimum epoxy modification (1.0 wt %), had fewer voids on the fracture surface as compared with pine/PLA composites without the modification of pine fibers via epoxy. Results confirmed that epoxy partially penetrated the pore/hollow inner structures of pine fibers and improved the fiber/matrix interfacial adhesion. Epoxy modification is found to be a simple and effective technique to improve the properties of biocomposites.