Biobased beer can rings, algae and bugs, chitin-based plastic breakthrough, gribble gut enzymes, banana-based products: The Digest’s Top 10 Innovations for the week of December 14th

December 13, 2018 |

#5 Canadian researchers report breakthrough in scaling chitin-based plastics

In Canada, researchers at McGill University are converting chitin, a material found in lobster and shrimp shells, into a biodegradable plastic.
Associate Professor of Applied Chemistry Audrey Moores tells CBC chitin is already used to produce polymers. Her group’s breakthrough was developing a way to produce them at larger scale. The team has already patented the process and is working on making the material more malleable using nontoxic additives.
The bioplastic can be used in disposable products such as cutlery and bags as well as 3D printer filaments. Chitin is also found in insect skeletons, making it extremely abundant.
More on the story, here.

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