Abstract
Bagasse is spent fiber left after extraction of sugar. It is mainly used as a fuel to concentrate sugarcane juice. In the present work, the possibility of preparing wood adhesives from bagasse has been explored. The parameters for the preparation of a lignin phenol formaldehyde (LPF) adhesive, (lignin concentration, formaldehyde to phenol molar ratio, catalyst concentration, reaction time and reaction temperature) have been optimized. It was found that up to 50% of phenol can be substituted by bagasse lignin to give LPF wood adhesive having better bonding strength in comparison to a control phenol formaldehyde (CPF) wood adhesive. Prepared resins were characterized using IR, DSC and TGA. IR spectra of LPF resin showed structural similarity with CPF resin. Thermal stability of LPF resin was found to be lower as compared to CPF resin. DSC studies reveal a lower curing temperature for LPF adhesive in comparison to CPF adhesive. A shelf-life study reveals that LPF exhibits consistent behavior as compared to CPF in respect to adhesive strength.
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