“…According to Akil et al (2011), vegetable fibres include bast fibres (or sclerenchyma), leaf or hard fibres, seeds, fruit, wood, cereal straw, and other grass fibres, most of which are composed of cellulose, hemicelluloses, lignin, waxes, and several water-soluble compounds, where cellulose, hemicelluloses, and lignin are the major constituents. Vegetable fibres have been used as a reinforcement of plastics and composites due to advantages such as lower density and good mechanical properties, as well as their economical and environmental advantages (Schmidt and Laurindo 2010;Debiagi et al 2011). If one is to consider cassava bagasse as potential polymer filler, it is important to know about its composition because, apart from containing cellulose and hemicelluloses, it also contains a high amount of starch, a natural polymer that has a high polarity due to the presence of large amounts of hydroxyls in its macromolecules, which interact with lignocellulosic fibres, resulting in improved mechanical properties (Corradini et al 2008).…”