Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp

Seaweeds, an abundant biomass, have shown potential as base material for the production of biodegradable plastics. Compared to plant-based biomass such as starch, seaweed has short harvest time and does not compete for land-use to grow. Most of the studies on seaweed-based bioplastics were using car...

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Main Authors: E. L. Hanry, Noumie Surugau
Format: Proceedings
Language:English
English
Published: Faculty of Science and Natural Resources 2021
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Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/2/Physical%20and%20mechanical%20properties%20of%20biodegradable%20films%20developed%20from%20alginate%20extract%20of%20wild%20seaweed%20Padina%20sp..ABSTRACT.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/1/PHYSICAL%20AND%20MECHANICAL%20PROPERTIES%20OF%20BIODEGRADABLE%20FILMS%20DEVELOPED%20FROM%20ALGINATE%20EXTRACT%20OF%20WILD%20SEAWEED%20Padina%20sp..pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zKEpSiYvg9vZHHzuKra49512D_AMLubu/view
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spelling my.ums.eprints.319662022-03-18T08:46:10Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/ Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp E. L. Hanry Noumie Surugau QK1-989 Botany TP1-1185 Chemical technology Seaweeds, an abundant biomass, have shown potential as base material for the production of biodegradable plastics. Compared to plant-based biomass such as starch, seaweed has short harvest time and does not compete for land-use to grow. Most of the studies on seaweed-based bioplastics were using carrageenan extract from Kappaphycus sp. and alginate from Sargassum sp. In this study, film sheets from crude alginate extract from a less-explored brown seaweed Padina sp. (PA) were developed by using glycerol (1%, 2%, and 3%, v/v) as plasticizer agent. The alginate extraction was using acid and alkali solutions. For comparison, films were also developed using commercial alginate (CA). The physical and mechanical properties, and biodegradability of these films were analysed using standard methods. As results, the PA film sheets were 0.029 to 0.052 mm in thickness with moisture content of 31 – 35 %. The tensile strength (TS) were 0.7 - 1.9 MPa where it decreases with the increase of glycerol. Meanwhile, the elasticity (elongation-at-break, EAB) is on the opposite trend i.e. 3% glycerol is more elastic than 1% and 2%. Similar trends were observed in CA but with higher TS. As for barrier property (expressed as water vapour permeability, WVP), there is no significant different in all the films. In term of appearance, the higher glycerol content gave better opacity and colour difference to the films. Interestingly, PA films has better opacity and colour difference compared to CA films. On biodegradability, all the PA films completely degraded in 15 days whereas CA films took 18 days. These results showed that Padina sp. has a good potential as base material for biodegradable films, however, TS and WVP of the resulted films need to be improved further. This can be done with reinforcing manipulation using cross-linker such as cellulose. Faculty of Science and Natural Resources 2021-10 Proceedings PeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/2/Physical%20and%20mechanical%20properties%20of%20biodegradable%20films%20developed%20from%20alginate%20extract%20of%20wild%20seaweed%20Padina%20sp..ABSTRACT.pdf text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/1/PHYSICAL%20AND%20MECHANICAL%20PROPERTIES%20OF%20BIODEGRADABLE%20FILMS%20DEVELOPED%20FROM%20ALGINATE%20EXTRACT%20OF%20WILD%20SEAWEED%20Padina%20sp..pdf E. L. Hanry and Noumie Surugau (2021) Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zKEpSiYvg9vZHHzuKra49512D_AMLubu/view
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
language English
English
topic QK1-989 Botany
TP1-1185 Chemical technology
spellingShingle QK1-989 Botany
TP1-1185 Chemical technology
E. L. Hanry
Noumie Surugau
Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
description Seaweeds, an abundant biomass, have shown potential as base material for the production of biodegradable plastics. Compared to plant-based biomass such as starch, seaweed has short harvest time and does not compete for land-use to grow. Most of the studies on seaweed-based bioplastics were using carrageenan extract from Kappaphycus sp. and alginate from Sargassum sp. In this study, film sheets from crude alginate extract from a less-explored brown seaweed Padina sp. (PA) were developed by using glycerol (1%, 2%, and 3%, v/v) as plasticizer agent. The alginate extraction was using acid and alkali solutions. For comparison, films were also developed using commercial alginate (CA). The physical and mechanical properties, and biodegradability of these films were analysed using standard methods. As results, the PA film sheets were 0.029 to 0.052 mm in thickness with moisture content of 31 – 35 %. The tensile strength (TS) were 0.7 - 1.9 MPa where it decreases with the increase of glycerol. Meanwhile, the elasticity (elongation-at-break, EAB) is on the opposite trend i.e. 3% glycerol is more elastic than 1% and 2%. Similar trends were observed in CA but with higher TS. As for barrier property (expressed as water vapour permeability, WVP), there is no significant different in all the films. In term of appearance, the higher glycerol content gave better opacity and colour difference to the films. Interestingly, PA films has better opacity and colour difference compared to CA films. On biodegradability, all the PA films completely degraded in 15 days whereas CA films took 18 days. These results showed that Padina sp. has a good potential as base material for biodegradable films, however, TS and WVP of the resulted films need to be improved further. This can be done with reinforcing manipulation using cross-linker such as cellulose.
format Proceedings
author E. L. Hanry
Noumie Surugau
author_facet E. L. Hanry
Noumie Surugau
author_sort E. L. Hanry
title Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
title_short Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
title_full Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
title_fullStr Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
title_full_unstemmed Physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed Padina sp
title_sort physical and mechanical properties of biodegradable films developed from alginate extract of wild seaweed padina sp
publisher Faculty of Science and Natural Resources
publishDate 2021
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/2/Physical%20and%20mechanical%20properties%20of%20biodegradable%20films%20developed%20from%20alginate%20extract%20of%20wild%20seaweed%20Padina%20sp..ABSTRACT.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/1/PHYSICAL%20AND%20MECHANICAL%20PROPERTIES%20OF%20BIODEGRADABLE%20FILMS%20DEVELOPED%20FROM%20ALGINATE%20EXTRACT%20OF%20WILD%20SEAWEED%20Padina%20sp..pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/31966/
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zKEpSiYvg9vZHHzuKra49512D_AMLubu/view
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