Coir, an important lignocellulosic fiber, can be incorporated in polymers like unsaturated polyester in different ways for achieving desired properties and texture. But its high level of moisture absorption, poor wettability and insufficient adhesion between untreated fiber and the polymer matrix lead to debonding with age. In order to improve the above qualities, adequate surface modification is required. In our present work, fiber surface modification was effected through dewaxing, alkali (5%) treatment, aqueous graft copolymerization of methyl methacrylate (MMA) onto 5% alkali treated coir for different extents using CuSO4 – NaIO4 combination as an initiator system and cyanoexhylation with a view to improve the mechanical performance of coir‐polyester composites. Mechanical properties like tensile strength (PS), flexural strength (ES) and impact strength (IS) of the composites as a function of fiber loading and fiber surface modification have been evaluated. Composites containing z5 wt% of fiber (untreated) improved tensile and flexural strength by 30% and 27% respectively in comparison to neat polyester. The work of fracture (impact strength) of the composite with 25 wt% fiber content was found to be 967 J/m. The elongation at break of the composites exhibits an increase with the introduction of fiber, All types of surface modification result In improved mechanical properties of the composites. Significant improvement in mechanical strength was also observed for composites prepared from 5% PMMA grafted fiber.
Biocomposites are prepared from a cheap, renewable natural fiber, coir (coconut fiber) as reinforcement with a biodegradable polyester amide (BAK 1095) matrix. In order to have better fiber‐matrix interaction the fibers are surface modified through alkali treatment, cyanoethylation, bleaching and vinyl grafting. The effects of different fiber surface treatments and fiber amounts on the performance of resulting bio‐composites are investigated. Among all modifications, cyanoethylated coir‐BAK composites show better tensile strength (35.50 MPa) whereas 7% methyl methacrylate grafted coir‐BAK composites show significant improvement in flexural strength (87.36 MPa). The remarkable achievement of the present investigation is that a low strength coir fiber, through optimal surface modifications, on reinforcement with BAK show an encouraging level of mechanical properties. Moreover, the elongation at break of BAK polymer is considerably reduced by the incorporation of coir fibers from nearly 400% (percent elongation of pure BAK) to 16‐24% (coir‐BAK biocomposites). SEM investigations show that surface modifications improve the fiber‐matrix adhesion. From biodegradation studies we find that after 52 days of soil burial, alkali treated and bleached coir‐BAK composites show significant weight loss. More than 70% decrease in flexural strength is observed for alkali treated coir‐BAK composites after 35 days of soil burial. The loss of weight and the decrease of flexural strength of degraded composites are more or less directly related.
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