Effect of coconut shell powder filler on performance of polyester composites for ballistic application

Authors

  • G Maheswaran Department of Textile Technology, PSG College of Technology, Coimbatore 641 004, India
  • R Murugan Department of Textile Technology, PSG College of Technology, Coimbatore 641 004, India
  • Abhijit Majumdar Department of Textile and Fibre Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Delhi 110 016, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56042/ijftr.v48i4.7635

Keywords:

Ballistic application, Coconut shell powder, Composite, Impact resistance, Nylon 6. 6, Polyester resin

Abstract

This work reports the use of coconut shell powder filler with polyester resin for the development of Nylon 6,6 fabric
reinforced composite panels. The impact resistance of the prepared composites against 0.22 caliber projectile has been
studied at four different weight proportions (10%, 20%, 30% and 40%) of coconut shell powder filler. With an increase in
filler proportion, the depth created on the clay backing after ballistic impact is found to decrease from 7.62 cm to 4.60 cm in
the 25 m range and from 7.62 cm to 2.39 cm in the 30 m range. Consequently, the area involved in impact energy absorption
is also found to increase from 0.44 cm2 to 2.27 cm2 in the 25 m range and from 1.86 cm2 to 4.9 cm2 in the 30 m range. The
increase in the area due to the absorption of impact energy ensures effective distribution of the impact energy over the
panels. Coconut shell powder filler added with resin has a significant effect in improving the impact resistance of the
composite panels due to the changes in the inter-yarn frictional force of the reinforced fabrics. Further, the impact test
results are based on the findings of tensile strength test and Rockwell hardness test. There is an increase in tensile strength
by 25% and hardness by 41.6% as compared to the control sample.

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Published

2024-01-05

How to Cite

Effect of coconut shell powder filler on performance of polyester composites for ballistic application. (2024). Indian Journal of Fibre & Textile Research (IJFTR), 48(4), 367-372. https://doi.org/10.56042/ijftr.v48i4.7635

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