Ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene micro-ribbon fibers gel spun using orange terpenes

Publication

Polymer Engineering & Science - February 2024
DOI: 10.1002/pen.26656

Authors

Kenneth R. Brown, Cole Love-Baker, ZhiJing Xu, and Xiaodong (Chris) Li.

Abstract

Toxic, hazardous petrochemical solvents are commonly used for industrial-scale ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) fiber production, but orange terpenes, a byproduct of orange fruit production, present a bio-derived, sustainable alternative. In this work, fine UHMWPE fibers were spun using orange terpenes as the spin solvent, hot-drawn at a draw ratio of 5:1, investigated for their morphology, microstructure, and thermal and mechanical properties. The resulting fibers exhibited a flat, micro-ribbon cross-section, which is highly desirable for achieving high fiber volume fractions in UHMWPE-fiber reinforced composites. After drawing, the fibers possessed 4× greater breaking tenacity than any previously published studies on UHMWPE fibers spun using orange terpenes with a tenacity of 8.6 cN/dtex and tensile modulus of 229.2 cN/dtex. Microstructural analysis via differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray diffraction revealed that the hot drawing process significantly increased molecular orientation, but crystallinity decreased due to crystallite melting during drawing. Therefore, the mechanical properties of these fibers may be significantly improved with optimization of the fiber drawing process. This work establishes the strong potential of orange terpenes as an environmentally-friendly alternative solvent for UHMWPE gel spinning and sets a foundation for future parametric optimization of the spinning and drawing of these fibers.

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Effect of tension during sulfonation stabilization for UHMWPE-derived carbon fibers