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Title
Chemo-mechanical extraction and characterization of sayote (Sechium edule) fibers at varying fiber maturity
Authors
JENNIFER BANDAO-ANTONIO and JOSE MARIO A. DIAZ
Received
May 16, 2022
Published
Volume 57 Issue 1-2 January-February
Keywords
chemo-mechanical, sayote (Sechium edule), fiber maturity, sun-drying, crystalline fiber, cellulose
Abstract
Cellulosic plant fibers are good reinforcing materials for composites because they are cheap, light weight, and exhibit
good mechanical properties. The isolation of the crystalline portion exposes the stable hydrogen bond network that can
form intermolecular bonding with other matrices, such as starch, polyvinyl alcohol and chitosan, among others. Sun
dried and undried sayote (Sechium edule) vines, of varying degrees of maturity, were subjected to uniform chemo
mechanical extraction procedures to obtain crystalline fibers. The chemo-mechanically extracted fibers were
characterized using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and
scanning electron microscopy (SEM). DSC thermograms revealed that the sun-dried and mature sample exhibited the
narrowest endotherm, indicating the presence of fewer amorphous structures. FTIR spectra showed that the numbers of
functional groups present in the fiber samples decreased with increasing degree of maturity. SEM micrographs reveal
that the mature portion of the sayote vine had more fibrous and orderly features, compared to the samples extracted
from the younger and intermediate portions. Further, chemo-mechanical extraction and X-ray diffraction (XRD)
analysis of fibers from mature, sun-dried sayote vines also revealed a relative crystallinity index of the extracted fiber
of 65%. The fiber yield from the mature portion of the vine was 9%. Sayote (Sechium edule) vine can be a promising
source of crystalline fibers for composite fabrication.
Link
https://doi.org/10.35812/CelluloseChemTechnol.2023.57.03
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