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__NOTOC__ A fiber-reinforced composite (FRC) is a composite building material that consists of three components:Serope Kalpakjian, Steven R Schmid. "Manufacturing Engineering and Technology". International edition. 4th Ed. Prentice Hall, Inc. 2001. . #the fibers as the discontinuous or dispersed phase, #the matrix as the continuous phase, and #the fine interphase region, also known as the interface. This is a type of advanced composite group, which makes use of rice husk, rice hull,rice shell, and plastic as ingredients. This technology involves a method of refining, blending, and compounding natural fibers from cellulosic waste streams to form a high-strength fiber composite material in a polymer matrix. The designated waste or base raw materials used in this instance are those of waste thermoplastics and various categories of cellulosic waste including rice husk and saw dust.


Introduction

FRC is high-performance fiber composite achieved and made possible by cross-linking cellulosic fiber molecules with resins in the FRC material matrix through a proprietary molecular re-engineering process, yielding a product of exceptional structural properties. Through this feat of molecular re-engineering selected physical and structural properties of wood are successfully cloned and vested in the FRC product, in addition to other critical attributes to yield performance properties superior to contemporary wood. This material, unlike other composites, can be recycled up to 20 times, allowing scrap FRC to be reused again and again. The failure mechanisms in FRC materials include
delamination Delamination is a mode of failure where a material fractures into layers. A variety of materials including laminate composites and concrete can fail by delamination. Processing can create layers in materials such as steel formed by rolling and ...
, intralaminar matrix cracking, longitudinal matrix splitting, fiber/matrix debonding, fiber pull-out, and fiber fracture. Difference between wood plastic composite and fiber-reinforced composite:


Properties


Basic principles

The appropriate "average" of the individual phase properties to be used in describing composite tensile behavior can be elucidated with reference to Fig. 6.2. Although this figure illustrates a plate-like composite, the results that follow are equally applicable to fiber composites having similar phase arrangements. The two phase material of Fig. 6.2 consists of lamellae of \alpha and \beta phases of thickness l_\alpha and l_\beta. and respectively. Thus, the volume fractions (V_\alpha, V_\beta) of the phases are V_\alpha=\frac and V_\beta=\frac. Case I: Same stress, different strain A tensile force F is applied normal to the broad faces (dimensions Lx L) of the phases. In this arrangement the stress borne by each of the phases (= F/L^2) is the same, but the strains (\varepsilon_\alpha , \varepsilon_\beta) they experience are different. composite strain is a volumetric weighted average of the strains of the individual phases. \vartriangle l_\alpha=\varepsilon_\alpha l_\alpha, \vartriangle l_\beta=\varepsilon_\beta l_\beta The total elongation of the composite, \vartriangle l_c is obtained as \vartriangle l_c=N \vartriangle l_\alpha+ N \vartriangle l_\beta and the composite strain \varepsilon_c is, \varepsilon_c=\frac=V_\alpha\varepsilon_\alpha+V_\beta\varepsilon_\beta= \sigma\biggl(\frac+\frac\biggr) Composite modulus E_c=\frac Case II: different stress, same strain Fibers that are aligned parallel to the tensile axis, the strains in both phases are equal (and the same as the composite strain), but the external force is partitioned unequally between the phases. F=F_\alpha+F_\beta=NL(\sigma_\alpha l_\alpha+\sigma_\beta l_\beta) \sigma_c=\left ( \frac+\frac \right )=\sigma_\alpha V_\alpha+\sigma_\beta V_\beta E_c=V_\alpha E_\alpha+V_\beta E_\beta


Deformation behavior

When the fiber is aligned parallel to the direction of the matrix and applied the load as the same strain case. The fiber and matrix has the volume fraction V_f, V_m; stress \sigma_f , \sigma_m; strain\varepsilon_f,\varepsilon_m ; and modulus E_f, E_m. And here \varepsilon_f=\varepsilon_f=\varepsilon_c. The uniaxial stress-strain response of a fiber composite can be divided into several stages. In stage 1, when the fiber and matrix both deform elastically, the stress and strain relation is \sigma_c=V_f E_f \varepsilon_f+V_m E_m \varepsilon_m=\varepsilon_c (V_f E_f+V_m E_m) E_c=V_f E_f+V_m E_m In stage 2, when the stress for the fiber is bigger than the yield stress, the matrix starts to deform plastically, and the fiber are still elastic, the stress and strain relation is \sigma_c=V_f E_f \varepsilon_f+V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_m)=V_f E_f \varepsilon_c+V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_c) E_c=V_f E_f+V_m \left(\frac\right) In stage 3, when the matrix the fiber both deform plastically, the stress and strain relation is \sigma_c=V_f \sigma_f(\varepsilon_f)+V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_m)=V_f \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)+V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_c) E_c=V_f \left(\frac\right)+V_m \left(\frac\right) Since some fibers do not deform permanently prior to fracture, stage 3 cannot be observed in some composite. In stage 4, when the fiber has already become fracture and matrix still deforms plastically, the stress and strain relation is \sigma_c=V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_m) However, it is not completely true, since the failure fibers can still carry some load.


Reinforcement with discontinuous fibers

For discontinuous fibers (also known as whiskers, depending on the length), tensile force is transmitted from the matrix to the fiber by means of shear stresses that develop along the fiber-matrix interface. Matrix has displacement equals zero at fiber midpoint and maximum at ends relative to the fiber along the interface. Displacement causes interfacial shear stress \tau_m that is balanced with fiber tensile stress \sigma_f. df is the fiber diameter, and x is the distance from the fiber end. \tau_m (\pi d_f)dx = \left(\frac\right)d \sigma_f \frac=\frac After only a very small strain, the magnitude of the shear stress at the fiber end becomes large. This leads to two situation: fiber-matrix delamination or matrix having plastic shear. If matrix has plastic shear: interfacial shear stress \tau_m \le \tau_. Then there is a critical length l_c that when l>l_c, after certain x, \sigma_f remains constant and equals to stress in equal-strain condition. \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)=2 \frac \frac=\frac The ratio, \frac is called the "critical aspect ratio". It increases with composite strain \varepsilon_c. For the mid-point of a fiber to be stressed to the equal-strain condition at composite fracture, its length must be at least d_f \sigma_f^/2\tau_. Then calculate average stress. The fraction of the fiber length carrying stress \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c) is \frac. The remaining fraction \frac bears an average stress \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)/2. \overline_f=\sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left -\left(\frac\right)\right\frac\sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left(\frac\right)=\sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left -\left(\frac\right)\right\quad l\ge l_c For l, average stress is \sigma_max/2 with \sigma_max=2\tau_l/d_f. \overline_f=\frac\sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left(\frac\right) \quad l\le l_c The composite stress is modified as following: \sigma_c=V_f \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left -\left(\frac\right)\right V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_m) \quad l\ge l_c \sigma_c=V_f \sigma_f(\varepsilon_c)\left(\frac\right)+ V_m \sigma_m(\varepsilon_m) \quad l\le l_c The above equations assumed the fibers were aligned with the direction of loading. A modified
rule of mixtures In materials science, a general rule of mixtures is a weighted mean used to predict various properties of a composite material . It provides a theoretical upper- and lower-bound on properties such as the elastic modulus, mass density, ultimate te ...
can be used to predict composite strength, including an orientation efficiency factor, \eta_0, which accounts for the decrease in strength from misaligned fibers. \sigma_c(\varepsilon) = V_m\sigma_m(\varepsilon) + \eta_0\eta_fV_f\sigma_f(\varepsilon) where \eta_f is the fiber efficiency factor equal to \fracfor l \leq l_c, and \left - \left(\frac\right)\right/math>for l > l_c. If the fibers are perfectly aligned with the direction of loading \eta_0 is 1. However, common values of \eta_0 for randomly oriented are roughly 0.375 for an in-plane two-dimensional array and 0.2 for a three-dimensional array. Appreciable reinforcement can be provided by discontinuous fibers provided their lengths are much greater than the (usually) small critical lengths. Such as MMCs. If there is fiber-matrix delamination. \tau_ is replaced by friction stress \mu P where \mu is the friction coefficient between the matrix and the fiber, and P is an internal pressure. \frac=\frac This happens in most resin-based composites. Composites with fibers length less than l_c contribute little to strength. However, during composite fracture, the short fibers do not fracture. Instead they are pulled out of the matrix. The work associated with fiber pull-out provides an added component to the fracture work and has a great contribution to toughness.


Application

There are also applications in the market, which utilize only waste materials. Its most widespread use is in outdoor deck floors, but it is also used for railings, fences, landscaping timbers, cladding and siding, park benches, molding and trim, window and door frames, and indoor furniture. See for example the work of ''Waste for Life'', which collaborates with garbage scavenging cooperatives to create fiber-reinforced building materials and domestic problems from the waste their members collect
Homepage of Waste for Life


See also

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Fiber volume ratio Fiber volume ratio is an important mathematical element in composite engineering. Fiber volume ratio, or fiber volume fraction, is the percentage of fiber volume in the entire volume of a fiber-reinforced composite material.Derek Hull. (1981).'' ...
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Fracture mechanics Fracture mechanics is the field of mechanics concerned with the study of the propagation of cracks in materials. It uses methods of analytical solid mechanics to calculate the driving force on a crack and those of experimental solid mechanics t ...
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Plastic composite (disambiguation) Plastic composite may refer to: * Wood-plastic composite * Composite lumber See also * Composite armour * Composite material * Fiber-reinforced composite * Plastic recycling Plastic recycling is the reprocessing of plastic waste into new p ...
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Plastic lumber Plastic lumber is a plastic form of lumber made of virgin or recycled plastic (PL or RPL, respectively.) It is mostly made of plastic and binders such as fiberglass or rebar; not to be confused with wood-plastic composite lumber. Widely employed ...
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Wood plastic composite Wood-plastic composites (WPCs) are composite materials made of wood fiber/wood flour and thermoplastic(s) such as polythene (PE), polypropylene (PP), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), or polylactic acid (PLA). In addition to wood fiber and plastic, WP ...
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Fibre-reinforced plastic Fibre-reinforced plastic (FRP; also called fibre-reinforced polymer, or in American English ''fiber'') is a composite material made of a polymer matrix reinforced with fibres. The fibres are usually glass (in fibreglass), carbon (in carbon-fib ...


References

3. Thomas H. Courtney. "Mechanical Behavior of Materials". 2nd Ed. Waveland Press, Inc. 2005. {{DEFAULTSORT:Fiber Reinforced Composite Woodworking materials Composite materials Recycled building materials Plastics Fibre-reinforced composites