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![]() BATTELLE SCIENTISTS WORK WITH PLASTIC MADE FROM CORN
Release Date: 6/30/2009
Customer inquiries drive research as scientists spend 18 months investigating ways to improve bio-based products that could replace petroleum-based plastics
Columbus, Ohio—Some call it corn. Others say maize. It originally came from Mesoamerica (now Mexico) and is now the most widely grown crop in the Americas. At Battelle, it’s being converted into plastic by a team of innovative materials scientists.
For the past 18 months, Battelle research scientists Corey Linden, Byron Tolbert, Jeff Boyce, and their colleagues have been acting as pragmatic problem solvers, searching for the clues needed to improve bio-based replacements for petroleum-based plastics. “We’re not getting any more oil and that’s what most plastics are made from,” Linden says.
The idea of turning corn into plastic is nothing new—people have been doing it for years. But in some cases, end consumers were unimpressed with the properties and costs of what “green” products were on the market. A team from Battelle’s Advanced Materials Group realized that for a corn based bio-plastic product to be competitive in packaging materials, it must cost the same or less than its oil-based counterparts—a significant element when replacing older products with newer, bio-based ones.
The Battelle research team developed a quick test for biodegradability by analyzing commercial composting processes and scaling them down to pilot scale reactor size, eliminating the need to do formal, expensive standards testing. “Over time, we got all the elements balanced,” Linden says. Their findings were presented at a conference in Florida.
Now, with a test method in hand and extensive research in the area, the team at Battelle is looking forward to receiving specific feedback from users of the corn plastic. “We’ve filled some of the technical gap that we identified,” he says. “Now we need more gaps to fill.”
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