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Mechanically Tunable, Compostable, Healable and ScalableEngineered Living Materials

2024 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Neel Joshi, Avinash Manjula‐Basavanna, Avinash Manjula‐Basavanna, Anna Duraj‐Thatte Neel Joshi, Anna Duraj‐Thatte

Summary

Researchers developed Mechanically Engineered Living Materials (MELMs), a class of compostable, healable, and mechanically tunable engineered living materials designed for scalable manufacturing. The materials integrate biological components with programmable mechanical properties, offering a sustainable alternative to synthetic polymers in applications requiring biodegradability and functional tunability.

<title>Abstract</title> Novel design strategies are essential to realize the full potential of Engineered Living Materials (ELMs), including their biodegradability, manufacturability, sustainability, and ability to tailor functional properties. Toward these goals, we present Mechanically Engineered Living Material with Compostability, Healability, and Scalability (MECHS) – a material that integrates these features in the form of a stretchable plastic that is simultaneously flushable, compostable, and exhibits the characteristics of paper. This plastic/paper-like material is produced directly from cultured bacterial biomass (40%) producing engineered curli protein nanofibers in scalable quantities (0.5-1 g L<sup>-1</sup>). The elongation at break (1-160%) and Young’s modulus (6-450 MPa) of MECHS was tuned to more than two orders of magnitude. By genetically encoded covalent crosslinking of curli nanofibers, we increase the Young’s modulus by two times. MECHS biodegrades completely in 15-75 days, while its mechanical properties are comparable to petrochemical plastics and thus may find use as compostable materials for primary packaging.

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