We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Nanocellulose as a Bio-Based Reinforcement in Vitrimer Nanocomposites: Manufacturing and Mechanical Characterisation
Summary
Researchers synthesized recyclable epoxy nanocomposites reinforced with cellulose nanofibrils as a bio-based, non-toxic alternative to conventional plastic materials, finding that 0.25 wt% cellulose loading increased tensile strength by 21% and flexural modulus by 22% — while the vitrimer matrix retained reshapability and shape recovery after reprocessing.
To address issues of plastic pollution and nanoparticle toxicity, this study focuses on the synthesis and characterization of recyclable nanocomposites reinforced with nontoxic bio-based nanoparticles. Bridging the gap between thermoplastic reprocessability and thermoset durability, a novel subclass of covalent adaptable networks (CANs) with associative cross-link exchange was adopted as the matrix system, while mechanically derived cellulose nanofibrils were used as reinforcement. Four nanocomposite variants with cellulose nanofibril contents of 0.25 wt%, 0.5 wt%, 1.0 wt%, and 1.2 wt%, respectively, were prepared by ultrasonic dispersion of nanoparticles into preheated epoxy monomer and imine hardener, followed by curing. Mechanical behavior was evaluated via tensile and three-point bending tests, while the contribution of nanoparticles in failure mechanisms was confirmed in fracture surface analysis. The mechanical characterization revealed that incorporating 0.25 wt% cellulose nanoparticles increased the maximum tensile strength by 21% under both tension and flexural loading, with corresponding modulus enhancements of 4% and 22%, respectively. Experimental evaluations confirmed reshaping and shape recovery capabilities, reprocessing improved mechanical properties of unreinforced material (failure strain +38%, flexural strength +14%, modulus +12.2%), while reinforced variants underperformed their pristine counterparts due to larger particles. These findings provide valuable insight for manufacturing sustainable and reprocessable polymer nanocomposites.