English: Dairy Byproducts Can Supplement Plastic
el Lunes, 22 de Octubre de 2007 - 06:20 PM EST
  Dairy Byproducts Can Supplement Plastic

By Laura McGinnis  for  ARS

The average American consumes more than 30 pounds of cheese every year, and each pound produced creates an estimated nine pounds of the liquid byproducts known as whey.
Disposing of whey isn't difficult—in fact, it can be profitable, thanks, in part, to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists in Wyndmoor, Pa. Researchers at the ARS Eastern Regional Research Center's (ERRC) Dairy Processing and Products Research Unit have helped create uses for more than o要e billion pounds of whey every year in products such as candy, pasta, animal feeds and even eco-friendly plastics.

Now, food technologist Charles I. o要wulata is using a process called reactive extrusion to supplement polyethylene—a common nonbiodegradable plastic—with whey proteins.
Reactive extrusion involves forcing plastic material through a heating chamber, where it melts and combines with a chemical agent that strengthens it before it's molded into a new shape. o要wulata showed that by combining dairy proteins with starch during this process, it's possible to create a biodegradable plastic product that can be mixed with polyethylene and molded into plastic utensils.


Food technologist Charles o要wulata inspects molded dairy bioplastic made from surplus whey proteins.  (Photo by Peggy Greb.)

Working with Seiichiro Isobe, a laboratory chief at the Japanese National Food Research Institute, o要wulata created a bioplastic blend. They combined whey protein isolate, cornstarch, glycerol, cellulose fiber, acetic acid and the milk protein casein and molded the material into cups. The dairy-based bioplastics proved to be more pliable than other bioplastics, which made them easier to mold.

Bioplastic blends can o要ly replace about 20 percent of the polyethylene in a product, so resulting materials would be o要ly partially biodegradable. However, o要wulata and his colleagues are currently applying this process to polylactide (PLA), a biodegradable polymer. This research could someday result in completely biodegradable bioplastics.

Read more about the research in the May/June 2007 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.
 



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