A research team has developed a new process that utilizes meat and bone meal (MBM) as raw materials to produce partly biodegradable plastic.
The research was presented at the American Chemical Society’s 241st National Meeting and Exposition. Fehime Vatansever and her associates are the members of the research team.
The US Food and Drug Administration implemented a ban on using MBM as cattle feed in 1997 to reduce the spread of the human form of Mad Cow Disease, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). This ban made MBM as a waste material to be disposed in landfills.
Vatansever stated that adverse chemicals are used for treating the meal from cows to raze any BSE. The treated MBM are then disposed into specially designed landfills. Instead of disposing MBM as waste material, the research team decided to use it to produce bioplastics that are free from petroleum.
The researchers blended the bioplastics produced from MBM with ultra-high-molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), a tough polymer utilized in PVC windows, joint replacements, snowboards and skis. From the test results, the researchers proved that their MBM/UHMWPE plastic has the same toughness and durability of UHMWPE with an added advantage of being partly biodegradable.
Vatansever said that any traces of BSE infectious elements present in MBM are deactivated in the production of the bioplastics. The new process reduces the quantity of petroleum required to produce plastics and allows reuse of MBM. She added that her team has produced a powerful, green material that can be manufactured easily.