Environmentally sustainable fibers from regenerated protein.

Biomacromolecules

CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering, P.O. Box 21, Belmont, Victoria, 3216, Australia.

Published: January 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • Concerns for the environment and consumer demand are pushing research towards eco-friendly fibers to replace synthetic fibers, highlighting the need for protein fibers from waste sources like feather keratin and wheat gluten.
  • These protein fibers are sustainable, abundant, high-quality, and beneficial due to their amino acid content and potential for interchain cross-linking.
  • Recent advancements in technology, like nanoparticle and cross-linking methods, can improve their wet strength and enable the commercial production of these fibers, effectively combining agriculture and textile processing to reduce waste.

Article Abstract

Concerns for the environment and consumer demand are driving research into environmentally friendly fibers as replacements for part of the 38 million tonnes of synthetic fiber produced annually. While much current research focuses on cellulosic fibers, we highlight that protein fibers regenerated from waste or byproduct sources should also be considered. Feather keratin and wheat gluten may both be suitable. They are annually renewable, commercially abundant, of consistent quality, and have guaranteed supply. They contain useful amino acids for fiber making, with interchain cross-linking possible via cysteine residues or through the metal-catalyzed photocrosslinking of tyrosine residues. Previous commercially produced fibers suffered from poor wet strength. Contemporary nanoparticle and cross-linking technology has the potential to overcome this, allowing commercial production to resume. This would bring together two existing large production and processing pipelines, agricultural protein production and textile processing, to divert potential waste streams into useful products.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bm8010648DOI Listing

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