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Mechanical characterizations of waste face masks reinforced polyester composites: Recycling wastes into resources

Heliyon 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Fazlar Rahman, Dipta Dey, Tanvir Mahabub Tamim, Preetom Ahamad Shoykot, M. A. Gafur

Summary

Researchers explored recycling discarded face masks into composite materials by combining shredded mask fibers with polyester resin. The resulting composites showed promising mechanical strength comparable to natural fiber alternatives, suggesting that waste face masks could be repurposed rather than ending up as microplastic pollution in the environment.

Polymers

Face masks are made of non-decomposable thin polypropylene sheets. People are discarding them in parks, beaches, drains, landfills, and roadsides because of a deficiency in recycling efforts. It poses health and environmental risks through soil, water, and air pollution, as well as implanting microplastics into aquatic and different active organisms via food chains. Therefore, the environment and ecosystem become unsustainable. This study explored the potential of recycling waste face masks (WFM) into composite materials. In this sense, WFM-reinforced three distinct polyester composites are developed with a 20 % fiber loading in the compression molding machine and employing shredded, parallel, and crisscross patterns of WFM. The tensile, flexural, and impact strengths of composites are assessed as per ASTM guidelines and contrasted with NFRP (natural fiber-reinforced polymer) composites. Besides, void contents and morphological features are investigated using the Field Emission Scanning Electronic Microscope (FE-SEM) to confirm the interaction between WFM and polyester. The maximum tensile and flexural strengths of 32.06 and 41.13 MPa, respectively, are found in the crisscross pattern WFM composite. The maximum impact strength of 0.053 J/mm is found in parallel, and the least void content of 0.63 % is found in crisscross WFM composites. Compared to NFRP composites, the mechanical strengths, void contents, and morphological properties of WFM composites are found promising. It proclaimed that WFM is an appropriate candidate for recycling into composites. It will deter environmental pollution and microplastic insinuation into living things, elevate sustainable development goals, and develop a circular economy by generating resources from WFM.

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