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Argentinean Scientists Develop Biodegradable Material Similar to Plastic

by Paula Alvarado, Buenos Aires on 11.20.06
Design & Architecture (materials)

argentinean_material.jpg

Two teams of Argentinean investigators have been developing for the past three years a new biodegradable material from soy and sunflowers proteins that was recently awarded with the Dupont-Conicet Scientist Technologic Development Program: a 25 thousand dollars prize. Its main utility: agriculture and food packaging. Proteins to elaborate the material are obtained from soy and sunflowers seeds. Once isolated and dried, compost similar to flour with 90% proteins is obtained. Then, with water and other components, films of the new material are produced. “The material’s main disadvantage is that proteins are permeable to water, and that widens the applications it can have”, said to Argentinean newspaper La Nación doctor Adriana Mauri, one of the project’s coordinators. Its advantages are that as soy and sunflowers seeds are used to make eatable oil, the material could be produced from oil industry’s leftovers; and also, the material’s permeability to gas: "this is great because food packaged with this could have longer conservation time”, explained doctor Patricia Eisenberg, another project coordinator. With this prize, the team will begin to add other components that can help reduce the materials’ disadvantage. One of the best applications of the material is to enhance bilberries’ life, by covering them with a thin transparent eatable film. “A market that will require this type of materials is the organic food industry”, points the expert. ::Via La Nacion

Comments (4)

I have a question. I see products like this marketed as being "green". I understand the greenness of being biodegradable but to replace an appreciable amount of plastic with this product may take a substancial amount of areable land.

jump to top Eric says:

Does this have a bigger impact on oil then using soy for synthetic tranportation fuels? Plastics are one of the wonders of the modern work, without them we could not possible make the intricate forms that we use without greater costs both enviormentally and money.
Being able to grow your plastics is a step in the right direction.

jump to top Robert Hansen says:

This is not really news. There's already companies marketing these types of products made from soy, corn and wheat.

jump to top Jim says:

Need To Mould A Food grade Plastic shape without buying everytime a metal casting mold need the easy cheap way , plsatic or rezine thank you

jump to top john maclane says:

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