| Literature DB >> 34720776 |
Alona Pawłowska1, Magdalena Stepczyńska1.
Abstract
The article presents a literature review of the plant origin natural compounds with biocidal properties. These compounds could be used as modifiers of biodegradable materials. Modification of polymer material is one of the basic steps in its manufacturing process. Biodegradable materials play a key role in the current development of materials engineering. Natural modifiers are non-toxic, environmentally friendly, and renewable. The substances contained in natural modifiers exhibit biocidal properties against bacteria and/or fungi. The article discusses polyphenols, selected phenols, naphthoquinones, triterpenoids, and phytoncides that are natural antibiotics. Due to the increasing demand for biodegradable materials and the protection of the natural environment against the negative effects of toxic substances, it is crucial to replace synthetic modifiers with plant ones. This work mentions industries where materials containing natural modifying additives could find potential applications. Moreover, the probable examples of the final products are presented. Additionally, the article points out the current world's pandemic state and the use of materials with biocidal properties considering the epidemiological conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Biocidal additives; Biodegradable polymers; Natural origin modifiers; Phytoncides; Polyphenols
Year: 2021 PMID: 34720776 PMCID: PMC8541817 DOI: 10.1007/s10924-021-02315-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Polym Environ ISSN: 1566-2543 Impact factor: 4.705
Fig. 1Chemical structure of flavonoids [99]
Fig. 2Chemical structures: hydroxybenzoic (a) and hydroxycinnamic (b) [115]
Fig. 3Chemical structure of lignans [120]
Fig. 4Chemical structure of stilbenes [120]
Fig. 5Chemical structure of: pinostrobin (a) [131], naringenin (b) [149], and hesperidin (c) [150]
Fig. 6Chemical structure of: luteolin (a) [159], apigenin (b) [149]
Fig. 7Chemical structure of: kaempferol (a), quercetin (b) [168], and myricetin (c) [169]
Fig. 8Chemical structure of: genistein (a) [230], daidzein (b) [220]
Fig. 9Chemical structure of glycitein [235]
Fig. 10Chemical structure of tannic acid [252, 253]
Fig. 11Chemical structure of: betulinic acid (a) and betulin (b) [282, 283]
Fig. 12Chemical structure of lapachol
Fig. 13Chemical structure of allicin [319]
The effectiveness of the biopolymers modification by certain natural additives
| Modifier | Material | Modification effects |
|---|---|---|
| Lignin | PLA | Enhanced thermal resistance [ |
| Caffeic acid, gallic acid | Gelatin | Increased mechanical and antioxidant properties [ |
| Vanillic acid | PLA | Improved resistance on the photooxidative degradation [ |
| Silymarin | PLA/PHB blends | Enhanced resistance on thermo-oxidative degradation [ |
| Resveratrol | PLA | Improved photo-oxidative and thermal stability [ |
| Hesperidin | PLA, PHA | Improved oxidation resistance [ |
| Apigenin | Starch | Decreased digestion rate of and improved thermal stability [ |
Kaempferol, myricetin, quercetin | Chitosan | Improved mechanical properties, reduced oxygen and water vapor permeability, decreased UV light transmittance [ |
| Quercetin | Gelatin | Increased mechanical properties and decreased swelling degree, improved the UV-light absorption [ |
| Chitosan | Reduced transparency and altered tint (to green one) [ | |
| Starch | Elevated thermal stability [ | |
| PLA/PEG blends | Enhanced mechanical and thermal properties, changed colour and reduced transparency [ | |
| PLA | Improved resistance on the photooxidative degradation [ | |
| Blackcurrant | Starch | Altered colour and physicochemical characteristics [ |
| Gelatin | Increased hardness and brittleness of polymer [ | |
| Tannic acid | Zein | Changed shape of zein molecule which affects wettability changes [ |
| Gelatin | Improved mechanical properties, increased compatibility between polymer matrix and additives modified with tannic acid, improved antioxidant activity, stability, transparency, and antibacterial properties [ | |
| Gelatin/silver nanoparticles | Synergistically increased antibacterial properties [ | |
| Chitosan | Improved transparency, antibacterial properties; increased tensile strength and decreased solubility of the material, affected synergistically on plasticizer contained in the material [ | |
| PLA/filler | Improved adhesion between polymer matrix and filler and greater dispersion of filler in the matrix [ | |
| Betulinic acid | PEG | Changed physical structure [ |
| Lapachol | PLA | Increased thermal durability and biodegradability [ |
| Allicin | Chitosan | Increased water solubility and changed colour [ |
| Chitosan/PVA blend | Decreased hydrophilicity, increased porosity and changed microstructure [ |