11 research outputs found

    Preparation of silk resins by hot pressing Bombyx mori and Eri silk powders

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    We investigate the mechanical properties and structure of silk resins as potential alternatives to tortoiseshell for producing eyeglass frames and various ornaments. Silk powders are obtained from Bombyx mori and Eri silk waste fibers before the degumming process. The powders are fabricated into resins via simple hot pressing under a pressure of 31.2 MPa at temperatures in the range 150–180 °C. The results indicate that the B. mori resins have higher micro-Vickers hardness, three-point bending strength, and elastic modulus (66 Hv, 122 MPa, and 8.7 GPa, respectively) compared to the Eri silk resins (58 Hv, 95 MPa, and 8.2 GPa, respectively). The better mechanical properties of the fibroin resins are related directly to longer drying times. The optimum drying conditions are found to be at a temperature of 100 °C under a–vacuum of −0.1 MPa for a time of 7 d. ATR-FTIR and XRD results show how the fibroin structure changes after resinification and drying. The morphology and the distribution size of particle of the silk powders and the fractured surfaces of the resins are analyzed from SEM micrographs. The present findings demonstrate that silk resins are suitable materials for developing useful applications because of their favorable mechanical properties

    Fabrication of Silk Resin with High Bending Properties by Hot-Pressing and Subsequent Hot-Rolling

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    This research reports the processability and mechanical properties of silk resins prepared by hot-pressing followed by hot-rolling and then analyzes their thermal and structural properties. The results show that regenerated silk (RS) resins are better suited for hot-rolling than Eri and Bombyx mori silk resins (untreated silk). When hot-rolling at 160 °C with a 50% of reduction ratio, maximum bending strength and Young’s modulus of RS resin reaches 192 MPa and 10.2 GPa, respectively, after pretreatment by immersion in 40 vol% ethanol, and 229 MPa and 12.5 GPa, respectively, after pretreatment by immersion in boiling water. Increased strength of the material is attributed to the increased content of aggregated strands and intramolecular linking of β sheets (attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy) and higher crystallinity (X-ray diffraction analysis). After hot-pressing and hot-rolling, RS resins have a stable decomposition temperature (297 °C)

    Proceedings of the 23rd Paediatric Rheumatology European Society Congress: part three

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