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Pilot-Scale Evaluation and Production Feasibility of Sustainable Antimicrobial Paper from Sugarcane Bagasse

International Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Studies 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Mukesh Mukesh, Sehar Anwar, Amna Gulshan, Maria Ali, Khuwaja Muhammad Ali, Yahui Guo

Summary

Researchers produced antimicrobial paper from sugarcane bagasse at pilot scale, leveraging its high cellulose content (~45%) to create a material with sufficient mechanical and antimicrobial properties to potentially displace conventional plastic packaging in food and consumer applications.

Polymers
Body Systems

This study examines the production of antimicrobial paper of sugarcane bagasse at the pilot-scales and also evaluates its potential to displace conventional plastic packaging. Early chemical analysis indicated the high cellulose content of SCB (≈45%) was suitable for pulping and paper formation. Pilot-scale experiments showed pulping yields in the 55–70% range under optimized conditions (120–160 °C, 30–90 min), and attributed improved fiber separation and less residual lignin to the established process. To improve their antimicrobial activity and mechanical properties, nanocomposite coatings based on silver nanoparticles (AgNPs,) chitosan-silver (CS-AgNPs), and silver/zinc oxide (Ag/ZnO) were deposited. The bending stiffness (up to 23±3 N/mm), tensile strength (up to 41±3 Nm/g), and folding endurance (up to 47±5 cycles) are vastly superior compared with the data of uncoated samples. Abstract: Antimicrobial testing against E. coli and S. aureus showed significant inhibition zones (maximum 17.0 mm), Ag/ZnO 2% exhibited the best antimicrobial activity. A preliminary cost and energy analysis revealed that significant drivers of cost came from nanoparticle synthesis and drying stages, and energy analysis reported a cumulative energy requirement of 1.3 kWh/kg of paper. Notwithstanding these obstacles, the results underscore the promise of SCB in obtaining high-performance, antimicrobial packaging. To enable large-scale production of this sustainable material, improvements in coating deposition, cost management of nanoparticles, and energy efficiency may facilitate commercial roll out.

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