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Fabrication and Mechanical performance of Bark Cloth/Glass Fiber reinforced Hybrid Polymer composites for Automotive Applications

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dc.contributor.author Alibet, Frances
dc.contributor.author Wambua, Paul
dc.contributor.author Githinji, David Njuguna
dc.contributor.author Rwahwire, Samson
dc.contributor.author Bongomin, Ocident
dc.date.accessioned 2026-06-24T08:02:28Z
dc.date.available 2026-06-24T08:02:28Z
dc.date.issued 2026
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10254
dc.description.abstract This study developed and evaluated a sustainable hybrid composite based on bark cloth and glass fibers for lightweight automo- tive and semi-structural applications. Hybrid laminates were fabricated via the hand layup technique with varying fiber weight fractions (15–25 wt%), bark cloth-to-glass fiber ratios, and stacking sequences. Mechanical, physical, and microstructural charac- terizations were performed to assess the effects of hybridization and laminate architecture on composite performance. The results demonstrate that hybridization markedly improves the mechanical performance of bark cloth composites. Optimal properties were achieved at a bark cloth-to-glass fiber ratio of 1:3 and a fiber weight fraction of 20 wt%, yielding tensile strength of 43.24 MPa, flex- ural strength of 140.94 MPa, and impact strength of 78.6 kJ/m2 . Laminates with glass fibers positioned in the outer layers exhibited superior flexural and impact resistance due to enhanced surface load-bearing capacity and stress transfer efficiency. Conversely, excessive fiber loading (25 wt%) led to property degradation, attributed to insufficient resin wetting and fiber agglomeration. SEM analysis confirmed that reduced voids and improved interfacial bonding in optimized hybrids governed the observed mechanical enhancements. This work presents the first systematic investigation of bark cloth–glass fiber hybrid composites and demonstrates that an optimized hybrid architecture can achieve a favorable balance between mechanical performance and sustainability. These findings highlight the potential of bark cloth–glass fiber hybrids as promising candidates for lightweight automotive interior components and semi-structural applications, contributing to the development of greener composite materials. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher WileyOnline en_US
dc.subject Bark cloth en_US
dc.subject Glass fiber en_US
dc.subject Hybrid composites | en_US
dc.subject mechanical properties en_US
dc.subject polyester resin | en_US
dc.subject Stacking sequenc en_US
dc.title Fabrication and Mechanical performance of Bark Cloth/Glass Fiber reinforced Hybrid Polymer composites for Automotive Applications en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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