Abstract
In recent times, demand for light weight and high strength materials fabricated from natural fibres has increased tremendously. The use of natural fibres has rapidly increased due to their high availability, low density, and renewable capability over synthetic fibre. Natural leaf fibres are easy to extract from the plant (retting process is easy), which offers high stiffness, less energy consumption, less health risk, environment friendly, and better insulation property than the synthetic fibre-based composite. Natural leaf fibre composites have low machining wear with low cost and excellent performance in engineering applications, and hence established as superior reinforcing materials compared to other plant fibres. In this review, the physical and mechanical properties of different natural leaf fibre-based composites are addressed. The influences of fibre loading and fibre length on mechanical properties are discussed for different matrices-based composite materials. The surface modifications of natural fibre also play a crucial role in improving physical and mechanical properties regarding composite materials due to improved fibre/matrix adhesion. Additionally, the present review also deals with the effect of silane-treated leaf fibre-reinforced thermoset composite, which play an important role in enhancing the mechanical and physical properties of the composites.
Highlights
The evolution of various efficient natural fibres as reinforcing material made natural fibre polymer composites (NFPC’s) a key attraction for the couple of decades
Pineapple fiber is extracted from the leaves of the pineapple plant, reinforcement for polymer composites material comprises those of sisal, agave, banana, and it is found generally in Asia and the Philippines
Fiber is extracted from the leaf wrap of the abaca plant, known as “manila hemp” even though it does not belong to bast fiber
Summary
The evolution of various efficient natural fibres as reinforcing material made natural fibre polymer composites (NFPC’s) a key attraction for the couple of decades. Synthetic fibres (for e.g. glass fibre and carbon fibre, etc.) were used earlier in polymer composite because of their high mechanical strength in various engineering applications. Ancient civilizations were involved in using natural fibres in various forms to meet their requirements. The Recently, NFPC’s industries thatdue natural have potential in the outdoor insulation, proshowed highfound strength to thefibres presence of great the cellulosic component. Capability of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) absorption by natural fibre resources [16,17,18]
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