• Home
  • Manufacturers & Suppliers
  • News
  • Trade Fairs & Events
  • Media Data
  • Newsletter
  • nonwovensTRENDS.com
    • Imprint
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Newsletter
    • Help
    • Mediadata
    • Company entry
    • Register
    • Login
    • Category tree News
    • Category tree Companies


Copyright © 2021 Deutscher Fachverlag GmbH

  • Enter Company
  • Help
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Manufacturers & Suppliers
  • News
  • Trade Fairs & Events
  • Media Data
  • Newsletter
  • nonwovensTRENDS.com
Chemical Fibers International melliand International Technical Textiles Technical Textiles melliand International Chemical Fibers International
  1. Home ›
  2. News ›
  3. Research / Institutes / Education ›
  4. Fraunhofer IGB: Feasibility of a bio-based circular economy

Fraunhofer IGB
Feasibility of a bio-based circular economy

21.12.2020 Bio-based substances recovered from waste could be used for water-repellent coatings on functional textiles. High-performance materials are currently being developed on the basis of raw materials produced from wastewater or waste, as well as other biogenic raw materials. Some of these have new and additional functions and are intended to replace petrochemical materials in the future.

© Photo: Fraunhofer IGB
Facebook
In the EVOBIO project coordinated by Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB, Stuttgart/Germany, 19 Fraunhofer Institutes are working on solutions for a sustainable economy by developing new concepts that utilize material flows in bioeconomy process cycles to produce optimized materials for innovative products.
The researchers have a wide variety of applications in mind: Proteins produced from rapeseed extraction meal, for example, serve as oxygen barrier layers on food packaging. Protein-based nanofiber materials from various raw materials, such as kidney beans and rapeseed, are used to develop filter materials, coating agents, or wound dressing materials, and nanofiber nonwovens are spun from rapeseed protein.
Protein-based materials with water-repellent properties are also being developed. In the future, they could replace halogenated hydrocarbons in the finishing of functional textiles. In combination with polyglucosamine from chitin, which comes from the shells and carapaces of crabs, shrimps and prawns, the Fraunhofer researchers were able to demonstrate that functional layers with both water-repellent and water-vapor-permeable properties can be produced with bio-based and biodegradable materials.

Top Companies
Deutscher Fachverlag GmbH

Deutscher Fachverlag GmbH

Read more

nova-Institute
Concept to unite the bio-based materials and recycling sectors
Durable, bio-based fibers
Revealing the potential of hemp-based textile materials
ttt Register Company suche
Register Company
  • Imprint
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Newsletter
  • Help
  • Media Data
  • Category tree "News"
  • Category tree "Companies"
Share this page:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2021 Deutscher Fachverlag GmbH

OPE Journal C2 Coating & Converting Europe chemical Fibres International Nonwovens industry
Newsletter
techtexTRENDS
Current trends for Technical Fibers, Technical Textiles and Nonwovens
stats