Polymers (May 2023)

Effect of <i>Cymbopogan citratus</i> Fibre on Physical and Impact Properties of Thermoplastic Cassava Starch/Palm Wax Composites

  • Zatil Hafila Kamaruddin,
  • Ridhwan Jumaidin,
  • Zatil Hazrati Kamaruddin,
  • Muhammad Rizal Muhammad Asyraf,
  • Muhammad Rizal Razman,
  • Tabrej Khan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15102364
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
p. 2364

Abstract

Read online

Cymbopogan citratus fibre (CCF) is an agricultural waste plant derived from a natural cellulosic source of fibre that can be used in various bio-material applications. This paper beneficially prepared thermoplastic cassava starch/palm wax blends incorporated with Cymbopogan citratus fibre (TCPS/PW/CCF) bio-composites at different CCF concentrations of 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 wt%. In contrast, palm wax loading remained constant at 5 wt% concentration using the hot moulding compression method. TCPS/PW/CCF bio-composites were characterised in the present paper via their physical and impact properties. The addition of CCF significantly improved impact strength by 50.65% until 50 wt% CCF loading. Furthermore, it was observed that the inclusion of CCF resulted in a little decrement in biocomposite solubility compared to neat TPCS/PW biocomposite from 28.68% to 16.76%. Water absorption showed higher water resistance in the composites incorporating 60 wt.% fibre loading. The TPCS/PW/CCF biocomposites with different fibre contents had 11.04–5.65% moisture content, which was lower than the control biocomposite. The thickness of all samples decreased gradually with increasing fibre content. Overall, these findings provide evidence that CCF waste can be utilised as a high-quality filler in biocomposites due to its diverse characteristics, including improving the properties of biocomposites and strengthening their structural integrity.

Keywords