Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer

A research is reported on the nanomechanics and tribology of the Arboblend V2 Nature biopolymer (a 100% bio-based material, biodegradable, or resistant depending of application), being a mixture of different biopolymers such as lignin, polylactic acid, cellulose, biopolyamides, and other natural add...

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Main Authors: Broitman Esteban, Nedelcu Dumitru, Mazurchevici Simona-Nicoleta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2020-09-01
Series:e-Polymers
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/epoly.2020.20.issue-1/epoly-2020-0055/epoly-2020-0055.xml?format=INT
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spelling doaj-58138369cbd14f6da7b15883bc314f852021-02-28T21:53:10ZengDe Gruytere-Polymers1618-72292020-09-0120152854110.1515/epoly-2020-0055epoly-2020-0055Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymerBroitman Esteban0Nedelcu Dumitru1Mazurchevici Simona-Nicoleta2SKF – Research & Technology Development Center, 3992 AE Houten, The NetherlandsDepartment of Machine Manufacturing Technologies, “Gheorghe Asachi” Technical University of Iasi, 700050, Iasi, RomaniaDepartment of Machine Manufacturing Technologies, “Gheorghe Asachi” Technical University of Iasi, 700050, Iasi, RomaniaA research is reported on the nanomechanics and tribology of the Arboblend V2 Nature biopolymer (a 100% bio-based material, biodegradable, or resistant depending of application), being a mixture of different biopolymers such as lignin, polylactic acid, cellulose, biopolyamides, and other natural additives. The specimens were made by an industrial-scale injection molding machine. The nanoindentation characterization have unveiled that an increase in processing temperature from 160°C to 170°C produces a rise in hardness and elastic modulus of ∼20%. Tribological characterization against a bearing-steel counterface has shown that for both processing temperatures, the increase of the applied load or the increase of sliding speed will produce an increase of the friction coefficient (µ) and wear. At an applied load of 1 N (contact pressure of 104 MPa) and tracks in a direction perpendicular to the surface textured lines, the lowest µ ∼ 0.148 are for samples made T = 170°C, while for tracks parallel to the textured lines, the lowest µ ∼ 0.059 is obtained for samples made at T = 160°C. Experiments made at different ambient humidity have established that friction coefficient is higher at 0% RH or at 75% RH than at 33% RH. Our results show that the biopolymers Arboblend V2 Nature is a candidate to substitute some popular fossil-based thermoplastics in numerous tribological industrial applications.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/epoly.2020.20.issue-1/epoly-2020-0055/epoly-2020-0055.xml?format=INTbiopolymersligninarboblend v2 naturenanoindentationwearfriction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Broitman Esteban
Nedelcu Dumitru
Mazurchevici Simona-Nicoleta
spellingShingle Broitman Esteban
Nedelcu Dumitru
Mazurchevici Simona-Nicoleta
Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
e-Polymers
biopolymers
lignin
arboblend v2 nature
nanoindentation
wear
friction
author_facet Broitman Esteban
Nedelcu Dumitru
Mazurchevici Simona-Nicoleta
author_sort Broitman Esteban
title Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
title_short Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
title_full Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
title_fullStr Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
title_full_unstemmed Tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
title_sort tribological and nanomechanical properties of a lignin-based biopolymer
publisher De Gruyter
series e-Polymers
issn 1618-7229
publishDate 2020-09-01
description A research is reported on the nanomechanics and tribology of the Arboblend V2 Nature biopolymer (a 100% bio-based material, biodegradable, or resistant depending of application), being a mixture of different biopolymers such as lignin, polylactic acid, cellulose, biopolyamides, and other natural additives. The specimens were made by an industrial-scale injection molding machine. The nanoindentation characterization have unveiled that an increase in processing temperature from 160°C to 170°C produces a rise in hardness and elastic modulus of ∼20%. Tribological characterization against a bearing-steel counterface has shown that for both processing temperatures, the increase of the applied load or the increase of sliding speed will produce an increase of the friction coefficient (µ) and wear. At an applied load of 1 N (contact pressure of 104 MPa) and tracks in a direction perpendicular to the surface textured lines, the lowest µ ∼ 0.148 are for samples made T = 170°C, while for tracks parallel to the textured lines, the lowest µ ∼ 0.059 is obtained for samples made at T = 160°C. Experiments made at different ambient humidity have established that friction coefficient is higher at 0% RH or at 75% RH than at 33% RH. Our results show that the biopolymers Arboblend V2 Nature is a candidate to substitute some popular fossil-based thermoplastics in numerous tribological industrial applications.
topic biopolymers
lignin
arboblend v2 nature
nanoindentation
wear
friction
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/epoly.2020.20.issue-1/epoly-2020-0055/epoly-2020-0055.xml?format=INT
work_keys_str_mv AT broitmanesteban tribologicalandnanomechanicalpropertiesofaligninbasedbiopolymer
AT nedelcudumitru tribologicalandnanomechanicalpropertiesofaligninbasedbiopolymer
AT mazurchevicisimonanicoleta tribologicalandnanomechanicalpropertiesofaligninbasedbiopolymer
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