Back to Search Start Over

Agricultural by-product suitability for the production of chitinous composites and nanofibers utilising Trametes versicolor and Polyporus brumalis mycelial growth

Authors :
Mitchell Jones
Paul D. Morrison
Ann C. Lawrie
Sabu John
Andreas Mautner
Alexander Bismarck
Tien Huynh
Source :
Process Biochemistry. 80:95-102
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Agricultural by-products can be upcycled into environmentally-sustainable, inexpensive chitinous materials and nanofibers derived from fungal mycelium for composites, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and water treatment applications. This study determined the suitability of common agricultural by-products as medium for fungal growth. Growth was measured by quantifying ergosterol, a unique fungal product, in solid and liquid media. The results reveal that fungi grew less on rice hull, sugarcane bagasse and wheat straw agricultural by-products than on commercial wheat grains. However, the liquid agricultural by-product blackstrap molasses facilitated very high biomass production, outperforming the commonly used laboratory nutrient malt extract. Hyphal fusion, sheet formation and hyphal diameter metrics of fungi growing on each substrate were evaluated by SEM to assess suitability for chitin nanofiber production. Utilising these materials offers a cheap, renewable, easily-isolated, and abundant alternative to problematic crustacean chitin that when implemented on a large scale could rapidly upcycle low-value agricultural by-products into high-value chitinous materials.

Details

ISSN :
13595113
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Process Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b4c17319b28715506105e89d76f7d4be