3 research outputs found
Sustainable and High Performing Biocomposites with Chitosan/Sepiolite Layer-by-Layer Nanoengineered Interphases
Biocomposites
encompassing biopolymers and natural fibers represent
potential candidates for the replacement of fossil-based polymers
in many application fields. However, due to poor matrix/fiber interphase
produces insufficient mechanical properties for practical application.
In this Letter, we use the Layer-by-Layer assembly technique in order
to modify the surface of natural fibers and produce a nanostructured
interphase capable of improving the mechanical properties of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-<i>co</i>-3-hydroxyhexanoate)/hemp fibers biocomposites. Chitosan
and sepiolite nanorods have been selected as interphase constituents.
When assembled on hemp fibers, this chitosan/sepiolite system conformally
coats every fiber yielding a nanostructured coating that subsequently
becomes the matrix/fiber interphase during composite preparation.
Thanks to the LbL assembled interphase, the biocomposites achieve
impressive mechanical properties with elastic moduli up to 2.6 GPa,
which is 70% and 30% better of the neat matrix and the composite prepared
with unmodified fibers, respectively. The achieved performances would
allow for the use of these LbL engineered biocomposites in load bearing
applications, thus opening up new opportunities for the exploitation
of biobased resources
Nanostructured Wood Hybrids for Fire-Retardancy Prepared by Clay Impregnation into the Cell Wall
Eco-friendly
materials need “green” fire-retardancy treatments, which
offer opportunity for new wood nanotechnologies. Balsa wood (Ochroma
pyramidale) was delignified to form a hierarchically
structured and nanoporous scaffold mainly composed of cellulose nanofibrils.
This nanocellulosic wood scaffold was impregnated with colloidal montmorillonite
clay to form a nanostructured wood hybrid with high flame-retardancy.
The nanoporous scaffold was characterized by scanning electron microscopy
and gas adsorption. Flame-retardancy was evaluated by cone calorimetry,
whereas thermal and thermo-oxidative stabilities were assessed by
thermogravimetry. The location of well-distributed clay nanoplatelets
inside the cell walls was confirmed by energy-dispersive X-ray analysis.
This unique nanostructure dramatically increased the thermal stability
because of thermal insulation, oxygen depletion, and catalytic charring
effects. A coherent organic/inorganic charred residue was formed during
combustion, leading to a strongly reduced heat release rate peak and
reduced smoke generation
Efficient Gas and Water Vapor Barrier Properties of Thin Poly(lactic acid) Packaging Films: Functionalization with Moisture Resistant Nafion and Clay Multilayers
Poly(lactic acid) (PLA) represents
one of the most promising and
attractive biobased polymer for the industrial development of environmentally
sustainable packaging. However, oxygen and water barrier properties
of PLA based films cannot compete with those of commercially available
composite multilayers. To fill this gap, we used the layer-by-layer
deposition technique on commercially used PLA thin films (30 μm
thick) in order to increase their barrier properties to oxygen and
water vapor. Nanometric films were grown by alternating branched poly(ethylene
imine) (BPEI), hydrophobic fluorinated polymer (Nafion), and montmorillonite
clay (MMT) layers with the aim of obtaining low gas permeability in
both dry and moist conditions as well as low water vapor permeability.
Two different kinds of architectures were designed and successfully
prepared, based on a 4 layer repeating unit (BPEI/MMT/BPEI/Nafion),
represented here as quadlayer (QL), and on a 6 layer repeating-unit
((BPEI/Nafion)<sub>2</sub>/BPEI/MMT), hexalayer (HL). Reduction in
oxygen and water permeabilities is observed for films based on both
types of repeat units. The reduction of the permeabilities increases
with the number of quad and hexalayers achieving reductions in terms
of oxygen permeability in both dry and humid conditions up to 98%
and 97% respectively for 10 HL and QL. Furthermore, a reduction of
78% of water vapor transmission rate through the functionalized film
was obtained for these films. As far as oxygen permeability is concerned,
HL films are more efficient than QL films for smaller numbers of deposition
units. These properties are shown to result from the complementarity
between the presence of BPEI/Nafion and MMT layers