scholarly journals Modeling the Stiffness of Coupled and Uncoupled Recycled Cotton Fibers Reinforced Polypropylene Composites

Polymers ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1725 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert Serra ◽  
Quim Tarrés ◽  
Miquel-Àngel Chamorro ◽  
Jordi Soler ◽  
Pere Mutjé ◽  
...  

The stiffness of a composite material is mainly affected by the nature of its phases and its contents, the dispersion of the reinforcement, as well as the morphology and mean orientation of such reinforcement. In this paper, recovered dyed cotton fibers from textile industry were used as reinforcement for a polypropylene matrix. The specific dye seems to decrease the hydrophilicity of the fibers and to increase its chemical compatibility with the matrix. The results showed a linear evolution of the Young’s moduli of the composites against the reinforcement contents, although the slope of the regression line was found to be lower than that for other natural strand reinforced polypropylene composites. This was blamed on a growing difficulty to disperse the reinforcements when its content increased. The micromechanics analysis returned a value for the intrinsic Young’s modulus of the cotton fibers that doubled previously published values. The use of two different micromechanics models allowed evaluating the impact of the morphology of the fibers on the Young’s modulus of a composite.

2008 ◽  
Vol 47-50 ◽  
pp. 427-430
Author(s):  
Yupaporn Ruksakulpiwat ◽  
Jatuporn Sridee ◽  
Nitinat Suppakarn ◽  
Wimonlak Sutapun

In this research, vetiver grass was used as a filler in polypropylene (PP) composite. Chemical treatment was done to modify fiber surface. Natural rubber (NR) and EPDM rubber at various contents were used as an impact modifier of the composites. The composites were prepared by using an injection molding. By adding NR or EPDM to PP composites, a significant increase in the impact strength and elongation at break was observed in PP composite with rubber content more than 20% by weight. However, the tensile strength and Young’s modulus of the composites decrease with increasing rubber contents. Nevertheless, the tensile strength and Young’s modulus of the composites with NR or EPDM are still higher than those of PP up to 10% and 20% rubber contents, respectively. Comparisons between NR and EPDM rubber on the mechanical properties of the composites were elucidated.


2018 ◽  
Vol 913 ◽  
pp. 564-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Wang ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Dong Lv ◽  
Jing Shen Wu

The matrix/filler interface plays a vital role in mechanical properties of polypropylene (PP)/rigid nanoparticles composites. In general, the use of spherical stearic acid modified CaCO3 (SA-CaCO3) can induce a weak interfacewhich facilitatesparticle debonding from the matrix under loading and reduces plastic resistance, enhancing the toughness of nanocomposites, while the use of polymer-grafted nanoparticles (PGS) can improve the Young’s modulus and yield stress because of strong interfacial binding between particle and matrix. With the objective to simultaneously improve the modulus, yield stress and toughness, the ternary nanocomposites, PP/PGS/CaCO3 (PPSC), were prepared and the morphology, crystallization, and mechanical behavior were investigated and compared to their binary nanocomposites. The results show that Young’s modulus is enhanced as the particle loading, and the yield stress is balanced by two interactions, i.e. the decreasing effect of the weak interface and the enhancement effect of the strong interface. The impact strength of the ternary nanocomposites shows insignificant improvement compared with neat PP, which is attributed to the brittle effect of the weak interface in the particle cluster of SA-CaCO3 and PGS.


2018 ◽  
Vol 89 (11) ◽  
pp. 2113-2125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert Serra ◽  
Quim Tarrés ◽  
Miquel Llop ◽  
Rafel Reixach ◽  
Pere Mutjé ◽  
...  

The textile industry generates a large amount of byproducts that must be treated before being recycled or disposed of. The treatments to extract the dyeing agents are mandatory, and involve costs and interaction with toxic reagents. A relevant amount of such byproducts are short cotton dyed fibers. Cotton fibers are high-quality cellulosic fibers and can be used as composite reinforcement. In this paper, dyed cotton fibers were used to formulate, obtain and tensile test composite materials. The impact of the presence of dyes was studied and such dyes enhanced the interphase between the matrix and the reinforcement. On the other hand, when a coupling agent was incorporated to the formulation of the composites, the dyes hindered the chemical interactions between the maleic acid and the OH groups of the cellulosic fibers. Nonetheless, the composite materials showed competitive mechanical properties that were better than other natural fiber-reinforced composites and comparable to some glass fiber-based ones. Dyed cotton fibers can be used as reinforcement without further treatment, increasing the value chain of the textile industry and decreasing the chemical treatments necessary to recycle or dispose of dyed textile fibers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 965-976
Author(s):  
Md. Abdullah Al Amin ◽  
Tasnim Mahjabin ◽  
Mahbub Hasan

In the present research, nylon-broom grass and onion root-broom grass reinforced hybrid polypropylene composites were manufactured using a hot press machine. Three different levels of fibre loading (5, 10, and 15 wt.%) with fibre ratios of 1:1 were incorporated in the polypropylene matrix. Tensile, flexural, impact and hardness tests of the composites were subsequently carried out. The two combinations showed opposite trends for tensile strength and impact strength and similar trends for Young’s modulus, elongation, flexural properties and hardness. Tensile strength of the onion root containing composites increased with an increase of fibre loading, while in the nylon containing composites, tensile strength decreased with an increase in fibre loading. Their Young’s modulus increased and % elongation decreased with an increase in fibre content. Both flexural strength and flexural modulus increased with an increase in fibre content in both combinations. The impact strength of the onion root containing composites decreased with an increase in fibre loading, while the nylon containing composites showed the opposite trend. The hardness of both combinations increased with an increase in fibre content. The best set of properties were found at 15 wt% fibre loading in the nylon-broom grass-PP hybrid composite.


Holzforschung ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ugai Watanabe ◽  
Minoru Fujita ◽  
Misato Norimoto

Summary The relationship between transverse Young's moduli and cell shapes in coniferous early wood was investigated using cell models constructed by two dimensional power spectrum analysis. The calculated values of tangential Young's modulus qualitatively explained the relationship between experimental values and density as well as the difference in experimental values among species. The calculated values of radial Young's modulus for the species having hexagonal cells agreed well with the experimental values, whereas, for the species having square cells, the calculated values were much larger than the experimental values. This result was ascribed to the fact that the bending moment on the radial cell wall of square cell models was calculated to be small. It is suggested that the asymmetrical shape of real wood cells or the behavior of nodes during ell deformation is an important factor in the mechanism of linear elastic deformation of wood cells.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackie E. Kendrick ◽  
Lauren N. Schaefer ◽  
Jenny Schauroth ◽  
Andrew F. Bell ◽  
Oliver D. Lamb ◽  
...  

Abstract. Volcanoes represent one of the most critical geological settings for hazard modelling due to their propensity to both unpredictably erupt and collapse, even in times of quiescence. Volcanoes are heterogeneous at multiple scales, from porosity which is variably distributed and frequently anisotropic to strata that are laterally discontinuous and commonly pierced by fractures and faults. Due to variable and, at times, intense stress and strain conditions during and post-emplacement, volcanic rocks span an exceptionally wide range of physical and mechanical properties. Understanding the constituent materials' attributes is key to improving the interpretation of hazards posed by the diverse array of volcanic complexes. Here, we examine the spectrum of physical and mechanical properties presented by a single dome-forming eruption at a dacitic volcano, Mount Unzen (Japan) by testing a number of isotropic and anisotropic lavas in tension and compression and using monitored acoustic emission (AE) analysis. The lava dome was erupted as a series of 13 lobes between 1991–1995, and its ongoing instability means much of the volcano and its surroundings remain within an exclusion zone today. During a field campaign in 2015, we selected 4 representative blocks as the focus of this study. The core samples from each block span range in porosity from 9.14 to 42.81 %, and permeability ranges from 1.54 × 10−14 to 2.67 × 10−10 m2 (from 1065 measurements). For a given porosity, sample permeability varies by > 2 orders of magnitude is lower for macroscopically anisotropic samples than isotropic samples of similar porosity. An additional 379 permeability measurements on planar block surfaces ranged from 1.90 × 10−15 to 2.58 × 10−12 m2, with a single block having higher standard deviation and coefficient of variation than a single core. Permeability under confined conditions showed that the lowest permeability samples, whose porosity largely comprises microfractures, are most sensitive to effective pressure. The permeability measurements highlight the importance of both scale and confinement conditions in the description of permeability. The uniaxial compressive strength (UCS) ranges from 13.48 to 47.80 MPa, and tensile strength (UTS) using the Brazilian disc method ranges from 1.30 to 3.70 MPa, with crack-dominated lavas being weaker than vesicle-dominated materials of equivalent porosity. UCS is lower in saturated conditions, whilst the impact of saturation on UTS is variable. UCS is between 6.8 and 17.3 times higher than UTS, with anisotropic samples forming each end member. The Young's modulus of dry samples ranges from 4.49 to 21.59 GPa and is systematically reduced in water-saturated tests. The interrelation of porosity, UCS, UTS and Young's modulus was modelled with good replication of the data. Acceleration of monitored acoustic emission (AE) rates during deformation was assessed by fitting Poisson point process models in a Bayesian framework. An exponential acceleration model closely replicated the tensile strength tests, whilst compressive tests tended to have relatively high early rates of AEs, suggesting failure forecast may be more accurate in tensile regimes, though with shorter warning times. The Gutenberg-Richter b-value has a negative correlation with connected porosity for both UCS and UTS tests which we attribute to different stress intensities caused by differing pore networks. b-value is higher for UTS than UCS, and typically decreases (positive Δb) during tests, with the exception of cataclastic samples in compression. Δb correlates positively with connected porosity in compression, and negatively in tension. Δb using a fixed sampling length may be a more useful metric for monitoring changes in activity at volcanoes than b-value with an arbitrary starting point. Using coda wave interferometry (CWI) we identify velocity reductions during mechanical testing in compression and tension, the magnitude of which is greater in more porous samples in UTS but independent of porosity in UCS, and which scales to both b-value and Δb. Yet, saturation obscures velocity changes caused by evolving material properties, which could mask damage accrual or source migration in water-rich environments such as volcanoes. The results of this study highlight that heterogeneity and anisotropy within a single system not only add uncertainty but also have a defining role in the channelling of fluid flow and localisation of strain that dictate a volcano's hazards and the geophysical indicators we use to interpret them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 93 (4) ◽  
pp. 704-728
Author(s):  
Anil K. Bhowmick ◽  
Subhabrata Saha ◽  
Anshul Baral ◽  
Kumar Vineet ◽  
Arup S. Deuri ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Aspects of penetration resistance of rubber compounds have been studied by developing a quasi-static test. The effects of indenter material and design, nature and dosage of fillers, and crosslinking density were investigated. Indenter material was found to have a negligible contribution to the penetration characteristics of the rubber compounds, whereas the conical indenter's shape and size of the tip were important. A change in the slope of the generalized penetration characteristic curve of the developed quasi-static test was considered to be the fracture initiation point. Although fracture initiation was early at higher carbon black loading, the overall penetration resistance was improved due to hysteresis, which was in accord with the impact energy method. This was a unique observation. The carbon black–filled sample was compared with the silica-filled vulcanizate. Surface morphology of the specimens penetrated at different energy levels was examined using scanning electron microscopy. A theoretical interpretation of the forces acting at the tip of the indenter and the energy requirement while penetrating a rubber compound against a conical indenter has been proposed. The initiation energy for penetration has inverse square root dependence on the Young's modulus of the compounds. The energy required for crack propagation in contrast, was directly proportional to the Young's modulus and also correlated with the hysteresis loss and frictional coefficient for the carbon black–filled vulcanizates.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (16) ◽  
pp. 3571
Author(s):  
Mingxue Sun ◽  
Yang Xu ◽  
Tiewei Xu

We studied the effect of Cu addition on the hardness of ultra-low carbon steels heat treated with different cooling rates using thermal simulation techniques. The microstructural evolution, Cu precipitation behaviors, variations of Vickers hardness and nano-hardness are comparatively studied for Cu-free and Cu-bearing steels. The microstructure transforms from ferritic structure to ferritic + bainitic structure as a function of cooling rate for the two steels. Interphase precipitation occurs in association with the formation of ferritic structure at slower cooling rates of 0.05 and 0.2 °C/s. Coarsening of Cu precipitates occurs at 0.05 °C/s, leading to lower precipitation strengthening. As the cooling rate increases to 0.2 °C/s, the interphase and dispersive precipitation strengthening effects are increased by 63.9 and 50.0 MPa, respectively. Cu precipitation is partially constrained at cooling rate of 5 °C/s, resulting in poor nano-hardness and Young’s Modulus. In comparison with Cu-free steel, the peak Vickers hardness, nano-hardness and Young’s Modulus are increased by 56 HV, 0.61 GPa and 55.5 GPa at a cooling rate of 0.2 °C/s, respectively. These values are apparently higher than those of Cu-free steel, indicating that Cu addition in steels can effectively strengthen the matrix.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 404
Author(s):  
Ankita Sinha ◽  
Atul Bhargav

Texture is an important attribute in the quality assessment of processed food products. Recently, Young's modulus is identified as one of the most important indicators of food texture. However, there is much ambiguity in the literature about quantification and standards for texture analysis. In this paper, the sensitivity of Young's modulus (and thus texture) towards the applied deformation rate, sample shape and size, moisture content is studied experimentally for potato and sweet potato samples. We found that Young's moduli vary by as much as 54% depending on the rate of applied strain, indicating the need for test standards. The strain rate dependent behaviour exhibits the viscoelastic nature of the potato samples, which was further validated by stress relaxation and cyclic tests. Based on our experimental iterations and associated finding of the work, we propose the need for a standardised procedure for measuring Young's modulus and texture analysis. We expect this work to serve as a crucial step toward standardised texture measurement during thermal processing of food products.


1998 ◽  
Vol 518 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Kahn ◽  
M.A. Huff ◽  
A.H. Heuer

AbstractSurface-micromachined polysilicon lateral resonant structures were fabricated and used to determine the temperature dependence of the Young's modulus of the polysilicon. This is done by passing a dc current through the beams during resonance testing, resulting in Joule-heating. The temperatures are calibrated by increasing the dc current until the melting point of silicon is attained. The calculated Young's moduli agree well with reported values for single crystal silicon.In addition, metal films were sputter-deposited onto the polysilicon resonators, and similar experiments performed on the composite devices to determine the temperature dependence of the modulus of the sputtered films. Ni films demonstrate a linear decrease in Young's modulus with temperature. TiNi films demonstrate two distinct modulus values with an intermediate transition region, due to the temperature-induced reversible phase transformation exhibited by TiNi.


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