Abstract
Wood-plastic composites (WPCs) have shown exceptional promise as a building material, especially for outdoor uses. Using renewable wood fiber as the reinforcing filler in WPCs increases the material’s environmental sustainability. While virgin commodity thermoplastics are primarily used in these composites, using post-consumer plastic further contributes to their sustainability. While they are beginning to be used in the Gulf countries, information on their performance, especially durability under harsh desert climates, is sparse. The present investigation on WPCs is based on the two most popularly used thermoplastics in WPCs, virgin high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PP), with the wood content varying between 0 and 36 wt. %. These were prepared with melt processing from a masterbatch and characterized primarily using thermal methods and tensile properties of their injection molded test pieces. Variations in tensile properties, especially the tensile modulus (MPa), the tensile strength (MPa), and the ultimate extensibility (%) of the composite samples were investigated to determine an optimal wood-fiber loading. For either polymer type, exceeding 27 weight percent of wood fiber resulted in unacceptably low ultimate extensibility of the material.
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