| A  method to carry out large-scale  manufacturing of everyday objects using a fully degradable bioplastic isolated from shrimp shells  has been developed by researchers at Harvard's Wyss Institute. The objects made  from this bioplastic, like cell phones, food container and toys, exhibit many  of the same properties as those created with synthetic plastics, but without  the environmental threat. This development is better than most bioplastics on  the market today, as it poses no threat to trees or competition with the food  supply. Most bioplastics are made from cellulose, a plant-based polysaccharide  material. The Wyss Institute team developed its bioplastic from chitosan, a form of chitin, which  is a powerful player in the world of natural polymers and the second most  abundant organic material on Earth. Chitin is a long-chain polysaccharide that  is responsible for the hardy shells of shrimps and other crustaceans,  armor-like insect cuticles, tough fungal cell walls—and flexible butterfly  wings. Majority of available chitin in the world comes from discarded shrimp shells, and is either thrown away or used in fertilizers,  cosmetics, or dietary supplements, for example. However, material engineers  have not been able to fabricate complex three-dimensional (3D) shapes using  chitin based materials—until now.
 The  Wyss Institute team, led by Postdoctoral Fellow Javier Fernandez, Ph.D., and  Founding Director Don Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., developed a new way to process the  material so that it can be used to fabricate large, 3D objects with complex  shapes using traditional casting or injection molding manufacturing techniques.  The chitosan bioplastic breaks down when returned to the environment within about  two weeks, and it releases rich nutrients that efficiently support plant  growth.  "There is an urgent need in  many industries for sustainable materials that can be mass produced,"  Ingber said. "Our scalable manufacturing method shows that chitosan, which  is readily available and inexpensive, can serve as a viable bioplastic that  could potentially be used instead of conventional plastics for numerous  industrial applications." The advance reflects the next iteration of a  material called Shrilk  that replicated the appearance and unique material properties of living insect  cuticle, which the same team unveiled about two years ago in Advanced Materials. They called  it Shrilk because it was composed of chitin from shrimp shells plus a protein  from silk. In this study, the team used the shrimp shells but ditched the silk  in their quest to create an even cheaper, easier-to-make chitin-based  bioplastic primed for widespread manufacturing. It turns out the small stuff  really mattered, Fernandez said. After subjecting chitosan to a battery of  tests, he learned that the molecular geometry of chitosan is very sensitive to  the method used to formulate it. The goal, therefore, was to fabricate the  chitosan in a way that preserves the integrity of its natural molecular  structure, thus maintaining its strong mechanical properties.
 
 "Depending  on the fabrication method, you either get a chitosan material that is brittle  and opaque, and therefore not usable, or tough and transparent, which is what  we were after," said Fernandez. After fully characterizing in detail how  factors like temperature and concentration affect the mechanical properties of  chitosan on a molecular level, the two honed in on a method that produced a  pliable liquid crystal material that was just right for use in large-scale  manufacturing methods, such as casting and injection molding. Significantly,  they also found a way to combat the problem of shrinkage whereby the chitosan  polymer fails to maintain its original shape after the injection molding process by adding wood flour, a waste  product from wood processing. "You can make virtually any 3D form  with impressive precision from this type of chitosan," said Fernandez, who  molded a series of chess pieces to illustrate the point. The material can also  be modified for use in water and also easily dyed by changing the acidity of  the chitosan solution. And the dyes can be collected again and reused when the  material is recycled. This advance validates the potential of using bioinspired  plastics for applications that require large-scale manufacturing, Fernandez  explained. The next challenge is for the team to continue to refine their chitosan fabrication methods  so that they can take them out of the laboratory, and move them into a  commercial manufacturing facility with an industrial partner.
 | 
{{comment.DateTimeStampDisplay}}
{{comment.Comments}}