Melt stretching and quenching produce low-crystalline biodegradable poly(lactic acid) filled with β-form shish for highly improved mechanical toughness

Int J Biol Macromol. 2023 Nov 1:251:126220. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2023.126220. Epub 2023 Aug 11.

Abstract

High-toughness biodegradable poly(lactic acid) (PLA) has always been intensively pursued on the way of replacing traditional petroleum-based plastics. Regulating microstructures to achieve self-toughening holds great promise due to avoidance of incorporating other heterogeneous components. Herein, we propose a straightforward and effective way to tailor microstructures and properties of PLA through melt-stretching and quenching of slightly crosslinked samples. The melt stretching drives chains orientation and crystallization at high temperature, while the quenching followed can freeze the crystallization process to any stage. For the first time, we prepare a type of transparent and low-crystalline PLA filled with rod-like β-form shish, which displays an outstanding tensile toughness, almost 17 times that of the conventional technique-processed one. This mechanical superiority is enabled by an integration of high ductility due to oriented chain network, and high tensile stress endowed by nanofibrous filler's role of β-form shish. Furthermore, the mechanically toughened PLA is demonstrated to generate the richest micro-cracks and shear bands under loading, which can effectively dissipate the deformational energy and underlie the high toughness. This work opens a new prospect for the bottom-up design of high-performance bio-based PLA materials that are tough, ductile and transparent by precise microstructural regulation through scalable melt processing route.

Keywords: Melt stretching; Microstructures; Poly(lactic acid); Quenching; Toughness; Transparency.