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Recycling of natural fiber composites: Challenges and opportunities.

Authors :
Zhao, Xianhui
Copenhaver, Katie
Wang, Lu
Korey, Matthew
Gardner, Douglas J.
Li, Kai
Lamm, Meghan E.
Kishore, Vidya
Bhagia, Samarthya
Tajvidi, Mehdi
Tekinalp, Halil
Oyedeji, Oluwafemi
Wasti, Sanjita
Webb, Erin
Ragauskas, Arthur J.
Zhu, Hongli
Peter, William H.
Ozcan, Soydan
Source :
Resources, Conservation & Recycling; Feb2022, Vol. 177, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

• Recycling of natural fiber reinforced polymer composites to new composites. • Impact of recycling/reprocessing on material properties of natural fiber composites. • Thermomechanical property, hygroscopicity, viscoelasticity, degradation, durability. • Discussing mechanism behind property changes: polymer degradation or fiber breakage. • Mitigating material property degradation with functional additive or virgin plastic. Natural fibers have been widely used for reinforcing polymers attributed to their sustainable nature, excellent stiffness to weight ratio, biodegradability, and low cost compared with synthetic fibers like carbon or glass fibers. Thermoplastic composites offer an advantage of recyclability after their service life, but challenges and opportunities remain in the recycling of natural fiber reinforced polymer composites (NFRPCs). This article summarized the effects of reprocessing/recycling on the material properties of NFRPCs. The material properties considered include mechanical performance, thermal properties, hygroscopic behavior, viscoelasticity, degradation, and durability. NFRPCs can generally be recycled approximately 4–6 times until their thermomechanical properties change. After recycling 7 times, the tensile strength of NFRPCs can decrease by 17%, and the tensile modulus can decrease by 28%. The mitigation approaches to overcome degradation of material properties of NFRPCs such as adding functional additives and virgin plastics are also discussed. The main challenges in these approaches such as degradation and incompatibility are discussed, and an effort is made to provide a rationale for reprocessing/recyclability assessment. Future applications of NFRPCs such as additive manufacturing and automotive part use are discussed. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09213449
Volume :
177
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Resources, Conservation & Recycling
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153598111
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2021.105962