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Green Additives in Chitosan‐based Bioplastic Films: Long‐term Stability Assessment and Aging Effects

EDIS 2024 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Kordula B. Schnabl, Laurens D. B. Mandemaker, Yadolah Ganjkhanlou, Ina Vollmer, Bert M. Weckhuysen

Summary

Researchers assessed the long-term stability and aging behavior of chitosan-based bioplastic films incorporating green additives, finding that while these bio-based materials show promise as sustainable packaging alternatives, their physicochemical properties degrade over time in ways that must be addressed before commercial viability.

Polymers
Body Systems

Although biomass-based alternatives for the manufacturing of bioplastic films are an important aspect of a more sustainable future, their physicochemical properties need to be able to compete with the existing market to establish them as a viable alternative. One important factor that is often neglected is the long-term stability of renewables-based functional materials, as they should neither degrade after a day or week, nor last forever. One material showing high potential in this regard, also due to its intrinsic biodegradability and antibacterial properties, is chitosan, which can form stable, self-standing films. We previously showed that green additives introduce a broad tunability of the chitosan-based material properties. In this work, we investigate the long-term stability and related degradation processes of chitosan-based bioplastics by assessing their physicochemical properties over 400 days. It was found that the film properties change similarly for samples stored in the fridge (4 °C, dark) as at ambient conditions (20 °C, light/dark cycles of the day). Additives with high vapor pressure, such as glycerol, evaporate and degrade, causing both brittleness and discoloration. In contrast, films with the addition of crosslinking additives, such as citric acid, show high stability also over a long time, bearing great preconditions for practical applications. This knowledge serves as a stepping-stone to utilizing chitosan as an alternative material for renewable-resourced bioplastic products.

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