New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass

Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus, L.) is a short day, annual, herbaceous plant processing high quality cellulose. The whole plant can be used as pulp in paper industry, composite industry, and electronic industry. Initially, kenaf was introduced in Malaysia as a high protein animal feed in 2000. Trend tow...

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Main Authors: Anuar, Hazleen, Mel, Maizirwan, Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah, Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi, Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2010
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/1/Nurhafizah_poster.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/
http://www.usim.edu.my/i-Inova2011/
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Institution: Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.iium.irep.67622015-03-31T04:12:18Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/ New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass Anuar, Hazleen Mel, Maizirwan Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan TS195 Packaging Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus, L.) is a short day, annual, herbaceous plant processing high quality cellulose. The whole plant can be used as pulp in paper industry, composite industry, and electronic industry. Initially, kenaf was introduced in Malaysia as a high protein animal feed in 2000. Trend towards environmental sustainability and development of renewable resources has significantly increased interest in kenaf as potential of raw materials for the utilization of bio pharmaceutical, bio fuel such as biodiesel and bioethanol, biodegradable polymers, and also bio organic acid industries. Kenaf is found to be naturally resistant to breakdown to its structural sugars since it is a lignocellulosic material. Thus, it needs to undergo pre-treatment process either by mild acid hydrolysis or base hydrolysis in order to liberate glucose. From this process, 8.65 g/L of glucose have been produced, which equivalent to 21.63 percent of glucose conversion. Next, the fermentation process was conducted by using Lactobacillus rhamnosus as microbes to produce lactic acid. After the fermentation process, the lactic acid was then purified and being synthesis into poly lactic acid either by polycondensation method or ring opening polymerization (ROP). 2010-09-26 Conference or Workshop Item REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/1/Nurhafizah_poster.pdf Anuar, Hazleen and Mel, Maizirwan and Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah and Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi and Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan (2010) New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass. In: Islamic Innovation Expo 2010 (i-Inova’ 2010), 26-28 September 2010, Indoor Nilai Stadium. (Unpublished) http://www.usim.edu.my/i-Inova2011/
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic TS195 Packaging
spellingShingle TS195 Packaging
Anuar, Hazleen
Mel, Maizirwan
Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah
Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi
Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan
New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
description Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus, L.) is a short day, annual, herbaceous plant processing high quality cellulose. The whole plant can be used as pulp in paper industry, composite industry, and electronic industry. Initially, kenaf was introduced in Malaysia as a high protein animal feed in 2000. Trend towards environmental sustainability and development of renewable resources has significantly increased interest in kenaf as potential of raw materials for the utilization of bio pharmaceutical, bio fuel such as biodiesel and bioethanol, biodegradable polymers, and also bio organic acid industries. Kenaf is found to be naturally resistant to breakdown to its structural sugars since it is a lignocellulosic material. Thus, it needs to undergo pre-treatment process either by mild acid hydrolysis or base hydrolysis in order to liberate glucose. From this process, 8.65 g/L of glucose have been produced, which equivalent to 21.63 percent of glucose conversion. Next, the fermentation process was conducted by using Lactobacillus rhamnosus as microbes to produce lactic acid. After the fermentation process, the lactic acid was then purified and being synthesis into poly lactic acid either by polycondensation method or ring opening polymerization (ROP).
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Anuar, Hazleen
Mel, Maizirwan
Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah
Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi
Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan
author_facet Anuar, Hazleen
Mel, Maizirwan
Seeni Mohamed, Nurhafizah
Mohd. Nasir, Nur Aimi
Mustafa Kamalbhrin, Mohd. Adlan
author_sort Anuar, Hazleen
title New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
title_short New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
title_full New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
title_fullStr New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
title_full_unstemmed New potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
title_sort new potential of biomaterials from kenaf fibre biomass
publishDate 2010
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/1/Nurhafizah_poster.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/6762/
http://www.usim.edu.my/i-Inova2011/
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