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The Influence of Starch Origin on the Properties of Starch Films: Packaging Performance

Materials 2021 108 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zuzanna Żołek‐Tryznowska Zuzanna Żołek‐Tryznowska Alicja Kałuża, Alicja Kałuża, Zuzanna Żołek‐Tryznowska

Summary

This study compared starch films made from maize, potato, oat, rice, and tapioca starches as potential food packaging materials, finding variation in tensile strength, water vapor transmission, moisture content, and surface free energy depending on starch origin.

Starch films can be used as materials for food packaging purposes. The goal of this study is to compare how the starch origin influence the selected starch film properties. The films were made from various starches such as that from maize, potato, oat, rice, and tapioca using 50%<sub>w</sub> of glycerine as a plasticizer. The obtained starch-based films were made using the well-known casting method from a starch solution in water. The properties of the films that were evaluated were tensile strength, water vapour transition rate, moisture content, wettability, and their surface free energy. Surface free energy (SFE) and its polar and dispersive components were calculated using the Owens-Wendt-Rabel-Kaelbe approach. The values of SFE in the range of 51.64 to 70.81 mJ∙m<sup>-2</sup> for the oat starch-based film and the maize starch-based film. The films revealed worse mechanical properties than those of conventional plastics for packaging purposes. The results indicated that the poorest tensile strength was exhibited by the starch-based films made from oat (0.36 MPa) and tapioca (0.78 MPa) and the greatest tensile strength (1.49 MPa) from potato.

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