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JOURNAL OF POLYMER ENGINEERING Vol. 23, No. 4, 2003, page 281 Effects of surface treatment of Kraft wood fibers by polymerization compounding on properties of fiber composites S.A. Hashemi[1], A. Ait-Kadi and P.J. Carreau
Chemical Engineering Department, Center for Applied Research on Polymers, CRASP, Ecole Polytechnique, P.O.Box 6079, Stn. Centre-Ville, Montreal, QC, Canada H3C 3A7
Abstract
Treatment
of fibers through polymerization compounding not only increases the adhesion
between polymer and fibers but also helps to disperse fibers into a viscous
matrix with existing equipment. The rheological and mechanical properties of
polyethylene composites containing treated wood fibers were studied.
Polymerization compounding (PC) was used to graft polyethylene chains on the
Kraft wood fibers. Composites containing 20 wt. % treated wood fibers were found
to have a Young modulus 37 % larger than that of the polyethylene alone.
Scanning electron micrographs suggest a strong interaction between the polymer
and the fibers. The complex viscosity of composites containing up to 10 %
treated fibers was found to be smaller than that of the polymer matrix and
considerably smaller than that of composites containing untreated fibers. The
elastic characteristic time based on the ratio of the storage and loss modulus
was found be approximately independent of the fiber content and of surface
treatment.
Keywords: polymerization compounding, Kraft fiber composites, morphology, rheology [1]
On leave from the Department of Composite,
Paint and Coating, Iran
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