Results in Engineering (Sep 2024)
A study of mechanical properties and performance of bamboo fiber/polymer composites
Abstract
In recent years, bamboo seems to have attracted the attention of researchers due to its advantages over synthetic polymers including being renewable, environmentally friendly, and fully biodegradable. Bamboo fibers at (9, 13, and 18 wt%) are filled with epoxy resin and the effects of mixing the bamboo fibers on mechanical properties were studied. In this paper, the tensile properties and performance of natural bamboo fiber powder-reinforced epoxy polymer matrix-based composites were investigated at three different curing temperatures ranging from T26 °C, T38 °C, and T50 °C. The results showed that the tensile strength and Young's modulus of the bamboo fiber/epoxy composites increased at T26 °C are 41.6 MPa and 2.84 GPa, respectively, for particle size 0.52 μm at a weight loading of 13 %. The increase in tensile strength is due to the excellent fiber matrix interface adhesion. However, it was found that the samples tested under T26 °C for bamboo fiber-reinforced epoxy composites acquired better tensile strength than those tested under the high temperatures of T38 °C and T50 °C. According to the analysis of the flexural characteristics of bamboo particle/epoxy composites, the composite with 1.5 μm particle size has the highest flexural strength at 13 wt% weight loading, measuring 105 MPa. The composite with a 1.5 μm particle size at 18 wt% loading records the maximum impact strength of, 5593 J/m2. This work provides a new approach for the development of lightweight and high-strength composite from natural fiber and polymer.