Micromechanical Modeling for Tensile Properties of Wood Plastic Composites: Use of Pruned Waste from Pecan Orchards as Sustainable Material for Reinforcement of Thermoplastic Composite
Resumen
Wood plastic composites (WPCs) specimens containing high-density polyethylene (HDPE)
and wood pruning waste were manufactured and evaluated for their mechanical properties. Pecan
waste was used as an accessible and sustainable source in this study, and the effects of its particle size
and concentration on WPC strengths were evaluated. Pecan waste was milled and sieved to various
particle sizes, and testing samples were fabricated by mixing them in a twin-screw extruder and
injection molding. A coupling agent was used to create a stable bond between the HDPE and wood.
Both tensile modulus and strength were increased with an increasing pecan flour concentration up
to about 60 weigh percent. A micromechanical model is proposed for predicting the mechanical
properties of the wood flour/fiber reinforce composite. This model uses a correction factor of an
elliptical of carried sizes and shapes. The preliminary results of the model have a high correlation
with the experimental values of the composite in all mesh sizes.
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