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Bioinspired co-polyesters of hydroxy-fatty acids extracted from tomato peel agro-wastes and glycerol with tunable mechanical, thermal and barrier properties.

Authors :
Marc, Mathilde
Risani, Regis
Desnoes, Eric
Falourd, Xavier
Pontoire, Bruno
Rodrigues, Rúben
Escórcio, Rita
Batista, Ana Paula
Valentin, Romain
Gontard, Nathalie
Silva Pereira, Cristina
Lopez, Christelle
Leroy, Eric
Lourdin, Denis
Marion, Didier
Bakan, Bénédicte
Source :
Industrial Crops & Products. Oct2021, Vol. 170, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

[Display omitted] • High yield extraction of hydroxy-fatty acids from agro-industrial byproducts. • Bioinspired polyesters are formed by co-polymerization of fatty acid and glycerol. • Tuning the level of esterified glycerol modifies the polymer's structure. • Resulting in modified elastomer's mechanical properties (up to 200 % elongation). • With significant impact on O 2 permeability and anti-biofouling properties. By mimicking the cutin natural polyester networks of plant cuticles, we produced hydrophobic elastomers by a sustainable process, i.e., using a catalyst- and solvent-free polycondensation of glycerol and hydroxy fatty acids, two by-products of the agro-food industry. The hydroxy fatty acid fraction was obtained by ethanolic alkaline hydrolysis of cuticle from industrial tomato. This industrial-like fatty acid fraction contained more than 90 wt%. of 9(10),16 dihydroxyhexadecanoic acid (diOHC16). The co-polyesters were designed by increasing the ratio of esterified glycerol/diOHC16 in a range observed in plant cutins (up to 6 wt%). Their structure and functional properties (thermal, mechanical, gas permeability, interaction with bacterial cells) were characterized. Increasing the glycerol contents induced a significant decrease in the crosslink density of the polyesters and the formation of crystalline domains with a hexagonal organization. These structural modifications were related to a marked increase of elastomeric extensibility (up to 217 %). While water vapor permeability was not impacted, the increase of glycerol content induced a significant decrease in oxygen permeability. None of the polyesters displayed biocide activity, but an increase of glycerol content significantly reduced the adhesion of bacterial cells, potentially giving rise to antifouling applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09266690
Volume :
170
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Industrial Crops & Products
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152076251
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.indcrop.2021.113718