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Next-generation biopolymers: Advanced functionality and improved sustainability

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2011

P.J. Halley
Affiliation:
AIBN, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia; p.halley@uq.edu.au
John R. Dorgan
Affiliation:
Chemical Engineering Department, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401, USA; jdorgan@mines.edu

Abstract

A significant change is occurring in the global polymer industries. Development of a new generation of bio-based polymers, polymers derived from renewable resources, is progressing rapidly. Complementing historical biopolymers such as natural rubber and cellulosics, these new bioplastics include a growing number of commercial successes, including polylactides and polyhydroxyalkanoates. Many more bioplastics are on the near horizon, made possible by rapid advances in biotechnology. The molecular specificity of biochemical transformations is ideally suited for producing high purity monomers needed for making high molecular weight polymer molecules. Some of the newest developments involve the creation of well-established polymers (polyethylene, polybutlylene, poly(ethylene terephthalate)) via new biochemical pathways that start with renewable, rather than fossil, resources. This article highlights some recent advances in bio-based polymers. Specifically, this review includes topics ranging from novel biopolymer synthesis, new bio-based nanocomposites, novel processing, and holistic assessments of sustainability through quantitative life-cycle analysis. It is demonstrated that greener plastic materials can be produced through ecologically responsible conversion of renewable resources using industrial biotechnology and enhanced by nanotechnology. This emerging approach represents a triple technological convergence that promises to significantly alter the value chains of the global plastics industries.

Information

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2011
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Figure 1. Cross-cutting science and technologies are converging to impact the way plastic materials are obtained. Ecologically responsible use of renewable resources aided by industrial biotechnology and optimization of material properties using nanotechnology can create a new foundation for a sustainable plastics manufacturing industry.

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Figure 2. Characterization of bioplastics depending on the number of distinct biochemical transformations needed to obtain the final polymer. (Image courtesy of Y. Doi, RIKEN Institute). PHAs, polyhydroxyalkanoates.

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Figure 3. Thermoplastic starch food packaging.

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Figure 4. Ethanol from biomass provides a feedstock for producing polyethylene. Figure shows ethanol conversion to ethylene to polyethylene.

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Figure 5. Ethanol can be converted to ethylene glycol, which when polymerized with terephthalic acid produces a polyethylene terephthalate that is 30% bio-based. This is the basis of the present PlantBottle technology.

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Figure 6. Isoprene is being produced starting from renewable resources due to the successful metabolic engineering of the isoprene pathway.45

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Figure 7. Isobutanol from renewable resources can provide monomers for polyisobutylene, butyl rubber, and polyethylene terephthalate.