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Physical and mechanical properties of jute, bamboo and coir natural fiber

journal contribution
posted on 2013-10-01, 00:00 authored by Subhankar Biswas, Qumrul Ahsan, Ahmed Cenna, Mahbub Hasan, Azman Hassan
A systematic study has been carried out to investigate the mechanical and physical properties of jute, bamboo and coir (brown and white) single fibers. The tensile properties (tensile strength, Young’s modulus and strain to failure) were determined by varying span length. Scanning electron microscopic analysis was also carried out to determine the physical properties of fibers in order to correlate with its strength, Young’s modulus and strain to failure. The Young’s modulus and strain to failure were corrected using newly developed equations. The study revealed that with increasing test span length the Young’s modulus increased and tensile strength as well as strain to failure decreased. This is because no extensometer could be used in this test set-up and machine displacement (denoted by α) was used for the modulus determination. It is also attributed that larger span length helps to minimize the machine displacement compared to smaller ones due to the reduced relative effect of slippage in the clamps. Among all fibers, the Young’s modulus of bamboo fiber was the highest. Jute fiber had smoother surface compared to other three examined fibers.

History

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Location

Dordrecht, The Netherlands

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, The Korean Fiber Society and Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

Journal

Fibers and polymers

Volume

14

Pagination

1762-1767

ISSN

1229-9197

eISSN

1875-0052

Issue

10

Publisher

Springer