| Literature DB >> 30717499 |
Francesca Luzi1, Luigi Torre2, José Maria Kenny3, Debora Puglia4.
Abstract
In the present review, the possibilities for blending of commodities and bio-based and/or biodegradable polymers for packaging purposes has been considered, limiting the analysis to this class of materials without considering blends where both components have a bio-based composition or origin. The production of blends with synthetic polymeric materials is among the strategies to modulate the main characteristics of biodegradable polymeric materials, altering disintegrability rates and decreasing the final cost of different products. Special emphasis has been given to blends functional behavior in the frame of packaging application (compostability, gas/water/light barrier properties, migration, antioxidant performance). In addition, to better analyze the presence of nanosized ingredients on the overall behavior of a nanocomposite system composed of synthetic polymers, combined with biodegradable and/or bio-based plastics, the nature and effect of the inclusion of bio-based nanofillers has been investigated.Entities:
Keywords: bio-based; blends; fossil; hybrids; packaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 30717499 PMCID: PMC6384613 DOI: 10.3390/ma12030471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Morphological characterization of bio-based nanofillers. Panel A: Polysaccharides—plant origin: (a) Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) image of Cellulose Nanocrystals CNC [27]; (b) Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM) image of lignin nanoparticles [34]; (c) TEM image of starch nanoparticles [35]. Panel B: Nanofillers from Polysaccharides—animal origin: (a) TEM image of Chitin nanocrystals [36], (b) TEM image of modified chitosan nanoparticles (CSNP) by poly (ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate (PEGMA) (PEGMA-graft-CSNP) [37]. Panel C: From proteins: (a) Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) image of nanokeratin [38].
Figure 2Panel A: Global worldwide plastic production and related application sectors; Panel B: Global plastic consumption in Europe [101].
Physical properties of polymers applied in packaging and food packaging.
| Polymer | Packaging Types | Thermal | Mechanical | Permeability | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tg (°C) | Tm (°C) | T (MPa) | εB (%) | OP | H2O: WVTR (g/m2/day) | O2 | CO2 | ||
|
| Bottles, microwaveable and ovenable trays, boil in-the-bag products | 70–87 | 243–268 | 48–72 | 20–300 | ++ | 15–20 | 100–150 | 300–600 |
|
| Jars and other rigid containers, pallets, films, or layers for dry food | −125 to −90 | 135 | 22–31 | 100 ≥ 1000 | +++ | 7–10 | 1600–2000 | 12,000–14,000 |
|
| Wrapping films, bottles, trays, containers | 60–100 | n.d. | 40–51 | 40–75 | ++ | 0.5–1.0 | 2–4 | 400–10,000 |
|
| Films (wrapping, carrier bags, pouches), bottles | −125 to −100 | 112–135 | 8–31 | 200–900 | ++ | 10–20 | 6500–8500 | 20,000–40,000 |
|
| Cups and containers for frozen and microwaveable food, lids, thin-walled containers (yoghurt) | −10 | 167–177 | 31–41 | 100–600 | + | 10–12 | 3500–4500 | 10,000–14,000 |
|
| Disposable cups, plates and trays, boxes (egg cartons), rigid containers (yoghurt) | 100 | n.d | 35–51 | 1–4 | ++ | 4500–6000 | 14,000–30,000 | |
|
| flexible packaging of perishable food, such as cheese and meat | 50–60 | 220 | 40–52 | 5–10 | ++ | 300–400 | 50–75 | n.d |
|
| Films for moisture barrier, confectionery products | 70–75 | 215–220 | 25–30 | 220–250 | ++ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d |
|
| Thin films for dry/fatty food, multilayer | 60–65 | 180–150 | 45–110 | 180–250 | +++ | 1000 | 0.5 | n.d |
Tg—glass transition temperature; Tm—melting temperature; T—tensile strength; εB—elongation at break (%); OP—overall optical properties including haze, gloss, and transmission of visible light; permeability (H2O, water vapor; O2, oxygen gas; CO2, carbon dioxide gas) for polymeric films.
Oxygen permeability and water vapor transmission rate were evaluated (WVTR) in (g/m2/24 h) in tropical conditions (90% Relative Humidity (RH) at 38 °C).
n.d.: not defined. +: low. ++: medium. +++: high. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET); high density polyethylene (HDPE); polyvinyl chloride (PVC); low density polyethylene (LDPE); polypropylene (PP); polystyrene (PS); polyamide (PA); poly (vinyl alcohol) (PVA); poly (vinyl alcohol-co-ethylene) (EVOH).
Partially reprinted from: [42,105,108,109,112,118,119,120,121,122].
Figure 3A comparison of the intrinsic properties (mechanical characteristics) of usually utilized plastic materials, engineered polymers, rubbers, bio-based polymers, thermosets, and plastic materials [127].
Bioplastics as food contact materials [129].
| Bioplastic | Main Food Applications |
|---|---|
|
| Substitute for polystyrene (PS). |
|
| Low water vapor barrier, poor mechanical properties, bad processability, brittleness (pure cellulosic polymer), |
|
| Possible alternative of low- and high-density polyethylene (LDPE and HDPE), polystyrene (PS), and poly terephthalate (PET). |
|
| Family of many, chemically different polymers |
|
| Mainly based on sugar cane. |
|
| Alternative to conventional PET. |
|
| Better barrier function than PET. |
|
| Includes polybutylene succinate (PBS), polyethylene succinate (PES), and polyethylene adipate (PEA). |
|
| Includes polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT), polybutylene, and succinate terephthalate (PBST). |
|
| Biodegradable polyester. |
|
| Used for coatings, adhesives, and as additive in paper and board production. |
Figure 4Commercially realized pathways from biomass via different building blocks and monomers to bio-based polymers (a); estimated global production capacities of bioplastics (biodegradable, bio-based/non-biodegradable) for 2022 by material type (b) [131].
Characteristics and food use of polysaccharides extracted from animals and vegetables [140].
| Polysaccharide | Properties | Main Food Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Starch | Biodegradable | Flexible packaging: Extruded bags Nets for fresh fruit and vegetables Rigid packaging Thermoformed trays and containers for packaging fresh food. |
| Cellulose | Biodegradable | Cellophane membranes. |
| Chitin | Biodegradable | Coffee capsules |
| Chitosan | Biodegradable | Edible membranes and coatings (strawberries, cherries, mango, guava, among others) |
Figure 5Water vapor permeability for Poly(3-hydroxybutyric acid-co-3-hydroxyvaleric acid) (PHBV) blended with nine different biopolymers and polymers at different concentrations (a) [168]; polyamides completely and partially obtained from renewable sources (b) [163]; processing route for bio-polyethylene (bio-PE) (c) [169]; (d) transformation of sugar to Polyethylene 2,5-furandicarboxylate (PEF) and bio- polyethylene terephthalate (bio-PET), a new bio-based plastic similar to PET [170].
Figure 6SEM micrographs of (a) PP/TPS/MA blend [184]; (b) TPS/PE compatibilized with PP-g-MA 20%—scale 20 μm [186]; (c) 30TPS/70PA12 blend [190]; (d) LDPE/PHB 80:20—scale 40 μm [191]; (e) PS45/PHB45-(block copolymer) C10 blend [192]; (f) PLA/PS (0.3 volume fraction) blend [193].
Figure 7Panel A: Illustration of PVA/10CH/5Carv/3CNC formulation (a); and UV-Vis curves of PVA formulations (b) [286]. Panel B: Antibacterial study of PVA, PVA/CH, and PVA/CH/LNP nanocomposites, on the increase of plant pathogenic bacteria Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp. odoriferum (Pco) (CFBP 1115) 1 × 106 CFU/mL (a); and Xanthomonas arboricola pv. pruni (Xap) (CFBP 3894) 1 × 106 CFU/mL (b) [48]. Panel C: Antioxidant properties migrating substances of PVA/CH/LNP nanocomposites immersed in methanol solution for 24 h, measuring the absorbance level at 517 nm (a); and colorimetric deviation of the DPPH methanolic solution (b) [48].
Barrier properties of selected foodstuffs with classic and bio-based packaging systems [293].
| Packed Product | Barrier Requirements | Classic Packaging Solution | Bio-Based Packaging Solution | Technology Readiness Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meat/fish | High barrier against oxygen and gas (aroma); | Trays (PS, PP, PVC with EVOH + LDPE or PVC as coating) + foil (PVC) or lid, bags, for short term storage; waxed paper (wrapping), paperboard external packaging; transparent films (PP, PE) | Multilayer packaging materials, functional bio-based coating (modified starches) + antimicrobial and anti-fogging systems | On the market (as pilot packaging on selected markets); still more expensive than conventional solutions |
| Fresh cheese | High barrier properties; grease, water, O2, CO2 and N2, aroma and light. MAP (80% N2, 20% CO2) | Transparent films/foils; bags (e.g., LDPE/ EVA /PVdC /EVA), trays, wrapping films (PE, laminated), plastic cups (HDPE, PP, PS) + high barrier lid (PA/LDPE) | Eco-paper for short term storage (wrapping); PHA/modified PLA films | On the market, still more expensive than conventional plastics |
| Dairy products/liq uids | High barrier properties; water vapor (scavenging moisture), O2, light high/moderate for grease and aroma | Waxed paper, LDPE, PVC, or aluminum-coated/laminated paper or paperboard, plastic films (BOPP), metal cans | Paper/paperboard coated with bio-based materials | Close to market |
| Salad (flexible packaging) | High oxygen barrier, water resistant | Transparent laminated PP films | PLA films (perforated) Coated paper with bio-based films + transparent window | On the market, still more expensive than conventional plastics |
| Fruits/vegetables | Medium barrier properties (water vapor) | Perforated PP, OPP, LDPE; PVC films/bags, trays, pouches, overwraps; PS/PP trays | Molding pulp—trays PLA films (perforated) Edible coatings (polysaccharides: xanthan gum, starch, cellulose, HPC, MC, CMC, proteins: chitosan, corn zein, wheat gluten) + low barrier packaging films | On the market (molded pulp trays); on the market (PLA as pilot packaging in selected markets, e.g., for tomatoes); still more expensive than conventional solutions |
| Take-away food | Grease, thermal insulation | Polystyrene foam trays | Paperboard with grease barrier coating on the inside | On the market |
BOPP—biaxially oriented polypropylene, CMC/carboxymethyl cellulose, EVA = ethylene vinyl acetate, EVOH = ethylene vinyl alcohol, HDPE = high-density polyethylene, HIPS = high-impact polystyrene, HPC = hydroxypropyl cellulose, LDPE = low-density polyethylene, MC = methyl cellulose, OPP = oriented polypropylene, PA = polyamide, PE = polyethylene, PET = polyethylene terephthalate, PHA = polyhydroxyalkanoate, PLA = poly lactic acid, PP = polypropylene, PS = polystyrene, PVC = polyvinyl chloride, PVdC = polyvinylidene chloride.
Figure 8Bio-based plastic products.
Figure 9Bio-based polymers: Biomass content utilized in bio-based polymeric matrices (a); and development of production capacities from 2011 to 2020 (b) [282].