Druckansicht der Internetadresse:

Fakultät für Biologie, Chemie und Geowissenschaften

Sonderforschungsbereich 1357 Mikroplastik

Seite drucken

News

zur Übersicht


Neue SFB 1357 Publikation: Timmins (2022) - High Barrier Nanocomposite Film with Accelerated Biodegradation by Clay Swelling Induced Fragmentation

07.12.2021

slider publikation timmins

Herzlichen Glückwunsch an das Team C02 und ihre Co-Autoren: Renee L. Timmins, Anil Kumar, Maximilian Röhrl, Karel Havlíček, Seema Agarwal, Josef Breu zu ihrer spannenden neuen Publikation im Special Issue: Sustainable Macromolecular Materials and Engineering:

"High Barrier Nanocomposite Film with Accelerated Biodegradation by Clay Swelling Induced Fragmentation"

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/mame.202100727

Abstract:  Conventional biodegradable polymers such as poly(lactic acid) (PLA) are an attractive alternative to replace traditional nondegradable food packaging films which plague the environment. However, PLA has shown to not be degradable in some environmentally relevant conditions, including within the freshwater systems. Additionally, PLA suffers from very poor barrier properties, which could result in food spoilage. Compositing with clay has been used to improve barrier properties according to tortuous path theory. Here a synthetic, large aspect ratio Na-Hectorite is used that may be utterly delaminated in an organic solvent and composited with PLA by modification with 18-crown-6 (18C6Hec), yielding a castable, homogeneous nematic suspension. Upon drying, thermodynamics drive the suspension toward segregation into sublayers of PLA and partially restacked 18C6Hec in situ. This unique self-assembled nanostructure combines the best of two worlds: The aspect ratio remains high and results in a 99.3% reduction in oxygen permeability. Additionally, the film shows surprisingly high resistance to swelling at elevated humidity, but once soaked in water, clay swelling is triggered, which fragments the film and drastically increases the surface area by 2500%. Accelerated degradation is observed under controlled enzymatic conditions and in an environmentally relevant wastewater medium during CO2 evolution testing.

Twitter UBT-A Kontakt