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citations
Cited by 1,128 publications
(503 citation statements)
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References 144 publications
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“…Natural fiber reinforced composites have shown significant importance in the composite industry and the good reinforcing potential of these fibers has led to extensive use of these composites in automotive applications (Jawaid and Abdul Khalil 2011;La Mantia and Morreale 2011;Faruk et al 2012;Bledzki and Gassan 1999;Koronis et al 2013;Puglia et al 2005). The use of cellulosic fibers obtained from bast, leaf, seed, wood, straw and grass as reinforcements in plastics has increased in recent decades (Faruk et al 2012;Ramamoorthy et al 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Natural fiber reinforced composites have shown significant importance in the composite industry and the good reinforcing potential of these fibers has led to extensive use of these composites in automotive applications (Jawaid and Abdul Khalil 2011;La Mantia and Morreale 2011;Faruk et al 2012;Bledzki and Gassan 1999;Koronis et al 2013;Puglia et al 2005). The use of cellulosic fibers obtained from bast, leaf, seed, wood, straw and grass as reinforcements in plastics has increased in recent decades (Faruk et al 2012;Ramamoorthy et al 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the hydrophilicity due to the cellulosic hydroxyl groups and surface unevenness make natural fibers less preferred over synthetic fibers such as glass fibers in more demanding composite applications. The mechanical processing from field to fiber includes several stages (growing, field retting, scotching, hackling, carding and spinning), this makes the processing both costly, and also prone to quality fluctuations (Jawaid and Abdul Khalil 2011;Faruk et al 2012). Regenerated or partly man-made cellulose fibers do not have these drawbacks.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was observed that Tg value of treated fiber was higher and increases with the increase in crystallinity of the fiber. Figure 3 shows the DTA curves were all wood fibers (either treated or untreated fibers) exhibited two exothermic peaks overlapping with regions of weight loss (Jawaid and Khalil, 2011 The untreated rubber wood fiber started to degrade at 331°C were as this temperature was increased to 340 and 344°C for FT2 and FT1 samples, respectively. Therefore, it was concluded that a treated fiber were having a higher decomposition temperature as compared to untreated fiber (Li and Pickering, 2008).…”
Section: Microstructure Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Natural fibres influenced mechanical strength due to chemical composition such as to cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin and its orientation and some other factors such as type of plant, environmental factors during growth as well as extraction methods used [9]. Usage of natural fibre can replace synthetic fibres to minimise health hazards, low density and high flexibility [10].Recently, polymer hybrid composites have become the attraction into production of mechanical stable and renewable products [11]. Polymer hybrid composites are formed by incorporating two and…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, polymer hybrid composites have become the attraction into production of mechanical stable and renewable products [11]. Polymer hybrid composites are formed by incorporating two and…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%