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New Biodegradable Composite Material Using Nettle Fiber - NUST MISIS

Published on 2019-09-11. Edited By : SpecialChem

TAGS:  Biobased Solutions    

nettle-fiber-compositeNatalia Kuznetsova has developed a new biodegradable composite material with nettle fiber as a filler. If nettle fiber is used together with recycled polymers, then the polymer content can be reduced to 50%.

Utilizing Nettle Fiber as a Filler


Natalia Kuznetsova, a graduate of a NUST MISIS master’s program “Technologies and Materials of Digital Fabrication”, has developed a new biodegradable composite material with nettle fiber as a filler. Chemelot Campus (Netherlands), one of the largest chemical clusters in Europe became interested in the project. Under the contract with Chemelot Campus, Natalia Kuznetsova will bring the project to the stage of the first batch of material, ready for use on an industrial scale. Chemelot Campus funding for the development will be 60 thousand euros.

Contract with the Dutch Company Chemelot Campus


In August 2019, Natalia Kuznetsova, a NUST MISIS graduate, concluded a contract with the Dutch company Chemelot Campus, one of the largest chemical hubs in Europe, to continue developing the nettle composite at the company’s site in the Netherlands. The project to create a biodegradable composite was the graduate thesis at the University’s master’s program “Technologies and Materials of Digital Fabrication”.

Reducing the Cost of Polymer


Various thermoplastic polymers can be used as a matrix for a composite material. The uniqueness of this material is that the nettle filler reduces the cost of the polymer when calculating the price per kilogram of the material while maintaining its strength characteristics and increasing its elasticity and heat resistance,” — says the author of the project, Natalia Kuznetsova.

So, if we take a biodegradable material — polylactide as the matrix of a nettle composite, then the composite will turn out to be biodegradable and will be cheaper than the analogs. At the same time, due to the new property — heat resistance, it becomes possible to use the new material in products that come in contact with hot liquids, for example, in tableware.

If nettle fiber is used together with recycled polymers, then the polymer content can be reduced to 50%, leaving the possibility to further process this composite and use it as secondary raw material.

Bio-packaging for Various Industries


From this hybrid, you can make bio-packaging for household chemicals and food products, environmentally friendly children’s toys, jewelry, dishes, office supplies, and even bodies for electronic devices. All these products will be environmentally friendly, functional and at the same time inexpensive.

Future Goals


In the near future, the first industrial batch of the new environmentally friendly material will be produced at the site of the Chemelot Campus chemical hub. In the future, the company is planning to sell it to its corporate partners throughout Europe. The biodegradable composite project was also included in the four finalists of Unilever’s annual acceleration program, with which the negotiations on cooperation are currently being held.


Source: NUST MISIS
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