Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes

Noise has become a serious environmental problem and there are demands for alternative sustainable materials which capable to reduce the noise level at various frequency ranges. Therefore, the aim of this research is to study the potential of turning the agricultural waste and waste paper into a sou...

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Published in:MATEC Web of Conferences
Main Author: Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2014
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84906692306&doi=10.1051%2fmatecconf%2f20141501035&partnerID=40&md5=d2bcdb06912e460dceab9c045bd207f0
id 2-s2.0-84906692306
spelling 2-s2.0-84906692306
Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
2014
MATEC Web of Conferences
15

10.1051/matecconf/20141501035
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84906692306&doi=10.1051%2fmatecconf%2f20141501035&partnerID=40&md5=d2bcdb06912e460dceab9c045bd207f0
Noise has become a serious environmental problem and there are demands for alternative sustainable materials which capable to reduce the noise level at various frequency ranges. Therefore, the aim of this research is to study the potential of turning the agricultural waste and waste paper into a sound absorption panel. For the purpose of this study, combination of two materials was under studied; coconut coir fibre from agriculture waste and shredded waste paper from the office. There were two main objective of the research; first is to develop absorption panels from coconut coir powder that available locally with a combination of shredded paper at different percentage of mixture. Second objective is to identify the absorption rate of the panels. The study encompasses the fabrication of the particle board using the coconut husk powder mix with shredded waste paper and using the gypsum powder as the binder for the two materials. Four acoustic panels of size 0.5m x 0.5m and 0.012 m thick were fabricated with different mix ratio; 25% of coconut coir powder mixed with 75% of shredded waste papers for sample 1, 50% both of the material for sample 2, 75% of coconut coir powder mixed with 25% of shredded waste paper for sample 3, and lastly 100% of coconut coir powder for sample 4. The absorption coefficient of the panels was tested in a reverberation chamber and in accordance with ISO 354:1985 standards. Based on the results, sample 1 gave the highest absorption coefficient compared to sample 2, 3 and 4. It can be concluded that the acoustic panel made from a mixture of 25% coconut coir powder with 75% shredded waste paper provided higher absorption coefficient compared to the performance of the other samples. This might be caused by the size of the coir powder which is very small, creating less void space in between the panel and thus causing it to absorb less sound. Since sound absorption is very much affected by the availability of void space of the panel, further studies on other potential materials from waste should be conducted. © Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2014.
EDP Sciences
2261236X
English
Conference paper
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
spellingShingle Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
author_facet Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
author_sort Ismail F.Z.; Rahmat M.N.; Ishak N.M.
title Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
title_short Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
title_full Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
title_fullStr Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
title_sort Sustainable absorption panels from agricultural wastes
publishDate 2014
container_title MATEC Web of Conferences
container_volume 15
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1051/matecconf/20141501035
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84906692306&doi=10.1051%2fmatecconf%2f20141501035&partnerID=40&md5=d2bcdb06912e460dceab9c045bd207f0
description Noise has become a serious environmental problem and there are demands for alternative sustainable materials which capable to reduce the noise level at various frequency ranges. Therefore, the aim of this research is to study the potential of turning the agricultural waste and waste paper into a sound absorption panel. For the purpose of this study, combination of two materials was under studied; coconut coir fibre from agriculture waste and shredded waste paper from the office. There were two main objective of the research; first is to develop absorption panels from coconut coir powder that available locally with a combination of shredded paper at different percentage of mixture. Second objective is to identify the absorption rate of the panels. The study encompasses the fabrication of the particle board using the coconut husk powder mix with shredded waste paper and using the gypsum powder as the binder for the two materials. Four acoustic panels of size 0.5m x 0.5m and 0.012 m thick were fabricated with different mix ratio; 25% of coconut coir powder mixed with 75% of shredded waste papers for sample 1, 50% both of the material for sample 2, 75% of coconut coir powder mixed with 25% of shredded waste paper for sample 3, and lastly 100% of coconut coir powder for sample 4. The absorption coefficient of the panels was tested in a reverberation chamber and in accordance with ISO 354:1985 standards. Based on the results, sample 1 gave the highest absorption coefficient compared to sample 2, 3 and 4. It can be concluded that the acoustic panel made from a mixture of 25% coconut coir powder with 75% shredded waste paper provided higher absorption coefficient compared to the performance of the other samples. This might be caused by the size of the coir powder which is very small, creating less void space in between the panel and thus causing it to absorb less sound. Since sound absorption is very much affected by the availability of void space of the panel, further studies on other potential materials from waste should be conducted. © Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2014.
publisher EDP Sciences
issn 2261236X
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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