Abstract

Natural cellulose fiber reinforced biopolymer composites have attracted increasing attention due to environmental concerns. However, these fibers have relatively low mechanical properties and poor interfacial adhesion with matrices, limiting their composite mechanical properties. This study investigates the synergistic effect of two recently developed techniques to maximize the mechanical performance of ramie/poly (lactic acid) laminated composites, namely alkali treatment to loosen fiber molecular structure and to increase fiber surface roughness and subsequent cyclic loading treatment to fabrics to increase their tensile strength and modulus. The results show that the treated fabrics have increased crystallinity and crystal orientation factor as well as better orientation of fibers and more uniform structures, leading to 11% improvement in fabric tensile strength and 57% enhancement of tensile strength (90.9 MPa), 48% higher tensile modulus (5.6 GPa), 18% higher flexural strength (149.4 MPa), and 91% higher flexural modulus (8.2 GPa) for the corresponding composites. Meanwhile, postmortem analysis shows that better interfacial adhesion is achieved using this approach.

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