Special Issue “Natural Fiber Based Composites”
- Especially, once denaturated in a twin-screw extruder, sunflower proteins can be used for their thermoplastic behavior to produce slow release fertilizers through injection-molding with urea and/or municipal biowastes acting as additional sources of nutrients for plants [2].
- Fibers from linseed flax straw may be mechanically extracted in a continuous mode before their use in geotextile applications [3].
- Constituting an interesting source of vegetable squalene in its seeds, the stems of the amaranth plant are presented as a new perspective for building applications with low-density insulation blocks obtained from their pith fraction and hardboards from the bark one [4].
- After their mechanical mixing, flax and polylactide fibers can be transformed into green sound-absorbing composite materials through hot pressing, and various structure and profiling can be obtained by using different multilayer structures of nonwovens and adjusting the pressing conditions [5].
- The same sound-absorption ability can be obtained from hot pressed composites made from polycaprolactone (PCL) and kapok fibers as thermoplastic matrix and mechanical reinforcement, respectively, their sound-absorption performance depending on their volume density, the mass fraction of kapok fibers inside the materials, and their thickness [6].
- A thermoplastic biocomposite based on hemp fibers and polyamide 11 (PA11) has also been developed through a three-step process, i.e., a wrapping operation to obtain 100% biosourced commingled yarns followed by their weaving to produce two different fabrics and then the molding through thermocompression, and the resulting composites, with stacking of two cross-plies, were characterized regarding mechanical strength [7].
- Electrospun films developed from wastewater treatment plant sludge (WTPS) are also presented as new, local, circular, renewable, and environmentally friendly packaging materials, their characteristics (i.e., tensile properties, contact angle, and surface properties) being largely influenced by both purification and treatment of WTPS to make it suitable for the electrospinning process [8].
- In particular, flax-polylactic acid (PLA) non-woven load-bearing composites were obtained after two different physical pre-treatments of flax tows (i.e., ultrasound or gamma irradiation) rather than the addition of chemicals, and this resulted in effective fiber individualization and a significant increase in the stress at break after the ultrasound pre-treatment [9].
- Hot water, green liquor, and sodium chlorite pre-treatments were also suggested to improve the thermal stability and UV resistance performance of films made from cellulose nanofibers (CNFs) from sugarcane bagasse and spruce [10].
- Another pre-treatment example consists in the surface modification on the nanoscale of cotton fabrics using electrospun sericin/PNIPAM, and this pre-treatment allowed the fast forming of cotton fabrics that also revealed promising antimicrobial activity for subsequent textile applications [11].
- Antibacterial efficiency of textile cellulosic fibers can also be enhanced by means of microencapsulation and green grafting strategies using the bactericidal activity of chemicals from natural essential oils [12].
- In the same way, the grafting of chitosan-essential oil microcapsules onto cellulosic fibers would make it possible to consider the manufacture of protective textile substrates such as antimicrobial masks, bacteriostatic fabrics and healthcare textiles [13].
- It is also possible to enhance the flame resistance of cellulosic fibers using an eco-friendly coating consisting in the grafting of acrylic acid onto the surface of cotton using plasma technology for improved attachment of acrylate phosphate monomer, and this opens up the possibility of producing flame-retardant cellulosic textiles [14].
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Evon, P. Special Issue “Natural Fiber Based Composites”. Coatings 2021, 11, 1031. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings11091031
Evon P. Special Issue “Natural Fiber Based Composites”. Coatings. 2021; 11(9):1031. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings11091031
Chicago/Turabian StyleEvon, Philippe. 2021. "Special Issue “Natural Fiber Based Composites”" Coatings 11, no. 9: 1031. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings11091031
APA StyleEvon, P. (2021). Special Issue “Natural Fiber Based Composites”. Coatings, 11(9), 1031. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings11091031