Publication | Closed Access
Blends of starch with ethylene vinyl alcohol copolymers: effect of water, glycerol, and amino acids as plasticizers
41
Citations
12
References
2007
Year
EngineeringAmino AcidsChemistryPolymersChemical EngineeringThermosetsPolymer ProcessingPolymer ChemistryTensile StrengthMaterials ScienceNatural PolymerPolymer BlendPolymer EngineeringPolymer AnalysisAmino Acid AdditivesPolymer SciencePolymer CharacterizationFood EngineeringPolymer Property
Abstract Blends of thermoplastic starch with poly(ethylene‐co‐vinyl alcohol) copolymer (EVOH) were melt extruded with water/glycerol as plasticizer and a series of amino acid additives. The biggest factor in end‐use mechanical properties proved to be the relative humidity (RH) during storage. Plasticized starch‐EVOH blends stored at 0 and 50% RH changed significantly over time, with, for example, the tensile strength (TS) of the glycerol‐plasticized blend increasing from 4.7 to 26.3 MPa over 8 weeks when maintained at 0% RH. In contrast, the TS of this same sample stored at 75% RH remained unchanged for 8 weeks. Amino acids provided relatively minor, but significant changes in mechanical properties with time. Based on TS, elongation‐to‐break, and modulus, it may be concluded that β ‐alanine, sarcosine, and L ‐proline were more effective than glycerol at maintaining strong flexible blends. Increases in crystallinity and changes in morphology with time, as described by modulated DSC were correlated to these changes in mechanical properties. Published in 2007 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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