Properties and environmental sustainability of fungal chitin nanofibril reinforced cellulose acetate films and nanofiber mats by solution blow spinning Articles uri icon

publication date

  • June 2024

start page

  • 1

end page

  • 14

issue

  • 2

volume

  • 269

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0141-8130

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1879-0003

abstract

  • Materials from biological origin composed by renewable carbon facilitate the transition from linear carbonintensive economy to a sustainable circular economy. Accordingly, we use solution blow spinning to develop fully biobased cellulose acetate films and nanofiber mats reinforced with fungal chitin nanofibrils (ChNFs), an emerging bio-colloid with lower carbon footprint compared to crustacean-derived nanochitin. This study incorporates fungal ChNFs into spinning processes for the first time. ChNF addition reduces film surface roughness, modifies film water affinity, and tailors the nanofiber diameter of the mats. The covalently bonded β-D-glucans of ChNFs act as a binder to improve the interfacial properties and consequently load transference to enhance the
    mechanical properties. Accordingly, the Young's modulus of the films increases from 200 ± 18 MPa to 359 ± 99 MPa with 1.5 wt% ChNFs, while the elongation at break increases by ~45 %. Life cycle assessment (LCA) is applied to quantify the environmental impacts of solution blow spinning for the first time, providing global warming potential values of 69.7–347.4 kg⋅CO2-equiv.⋅kg− 1
    . Additionally, this work highlights the suitability of ChNFs as reinforcing fillers during spinning and proves the reinforcing effect of mushroom-derived chitin in biobased films, opening alternatives for sustainable materials development beyond nanocelluloses in the near future.

subjects

  • Biology and Biomedicine
  • Chemistry
  • Materials science and engineering
  • Renewable Energies

keywords

  • chitin nanofibrils; solution blow spinning; life cycle assessment