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Effect of Bamboo Flour Grafted Lactide on the Interfacial Compatibility of Polylactic Acid/Bamboo Flour Composites.

Xin-Yu SongMeng WangYun-Xuan WengZhi-Gang Huang
Published in: Polymers (2017)
Bamboo flour (BF) was grafted onto lactide (LA) in the molten state using stannous octoate as a catalyst to form BF-g-LA. Then, polylactic acid (PLA) was blended with BF (PLA/BF, 85/15 wt %) to prepare PLA/BF/BF-g-LA composites using BF-g-LA as a compatibilizer. The grafting rate of BF was characterized using infrared testing and elemental analysis. To investigate the effect of BF-g-LA on the performance of PLA/BF/BF-g-LA composites, the phase morphology, thermal stability, and mechanical properties of the composites were characterized using scanning electron microscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, and universal material testing, respectively. The addition of BF-g-LA improved the interface compatibility between PLA and BF. When the BF-g-LA content was 2 phr, the tensile and impact strengths of PLA/BF/BF-g-LA composites were 55.3 MPa and 9.56 kJ/m2, representing 30% and 27% increases, respectively, relative to corresponding values for PLA/BF composites.
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