Combination of corn pith fiber and biobased flame retardant: A novel method toward flame retardancy, thermal stability, and mechanical properties of polylactide

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Abstract

Some crop by-products are considered to be promising materials for the development of novel biobased products for industrial applications. The flammability of these alternatives to conventional materials is a constraint to expanded applications. Polylactide (PLA) composites containing a combination of oxidized corn pith fiber (OCC) and a biobased flame retardant (PATHAM) have been prepared via an in situ modification method. SEM/EDS, FTIR and TGA were performed to establish that PA-THAM was coated onto the surface of OCC. The mechanical properties, thermal stability and fire behavior of PLA-based biocomposites were investigated. The incorporation of 5 phr PA-THAM imparted biocomposite good interfacial adhesion and increased decomposition temperature at 10% mass loss by 50◦ C. The flame retardant properties were also improved, as reflected by an increased LOI value, a UL-94 V-2 rating, reduction of PHRR, and increased formation of char residue. Therefore, the introduction of 5 phr PA-THAM can maintain a good balance between flame retardancy and mechanical properties of this PLA/OCC system.

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Yang, Y., Wang, D. Y., Haurie, L., Liu, Z., & Zhang, L. (2021). Combination of corn pith fiber and biobased flame retardant: A novel method toward flame retardancy, thermal stability, and mechanical properties of polylactide. Polymers, 13(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/polym13101562

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