Pesticide and Environmental Update
Electroactive
Bioplastics Flex Their Industrial Muscle
Chemist Victoria Finkenstadt displays different samples of
electroactive bioplastics developed in her laboratory at the National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research. (D309-1)
Today’s robots are nimbler than ever thanks to artificial muscles
made of conductive polymers, a breed of shape-shifting plastic that bends,
bulges, and contracts when stimulated by electricity or when charged
particles called “ions” are used.
Efforts are also under way to put these same polymers to work in
biomedical applications, specialized sensors, light-emitting diodes, and
even the next generation of robotic Mars rovers.
The material’s space-age promise could get a further lift from
efforts of ARS scientists in Peoria, Illinois. Most conductive polymers in
the developmental pipeline are petroleum based. But Vicki Finkenstadt and
J.L. Willett have shown that plant polysaccharides, such as starch and
cellulose, work just as well.
In these interlinking chains of glucose the researchers see an
affordable, homegrown resource that sidesteps some of the pitfalls
associated with petroleum feedstocks. Chief among these is U.S. reliance
on foreign suppliers and—more generally—pollution tied to the
manufacture, use, and disposal of petroleum’s derivative products.
Technician Richard Haig evaluates the strength and flexibility of
starch-based electroactive bioplastics. (D311-1)
“Starch, cellulose, and chitin are some of the most abundant natural
polymers on Earth . . . [and] have a wide range of uses, functioning as
energy storage, transport, signaling, and structural components,” write
Finkenstadt, a chemist, and Willett, a supervisory chemical engineer, in
the February 2005 issue of Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. Both
work in the ARS National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research in
Peoria, where 100 full-time scientists pursue new, value-added uses for
midwestern crops.
“Our electroactive bioplastics offer new market options for
agricultural products and illustrate their potential for advanced uses,”
says Willett, who leads the center’s Plant Polymer Research Unit. “Their
renewability and relative ease of processing reduce environmental impact.”
Finkenstadt notes that one characteristic of synthetic polymers is
their disorganized molecular structure, which can slow the free flow of
electrons. Because of this, she says, “Synthetic conductive materials
have had a limited range of conductivity, were difficult to cast into
shapes, and became brittle after a few cycles of use.”
Polysaccharides, by contrast, have a predictable and uniform molecular
structure, making them relatively easier to shape and process on a large
scale.
“Our electroactive bioplastics can be molded or made into a film or
powder,” says Finkenstadt, “and the material is environmentally
friendly and inexpensive.”
Research leader J.L. Willett (right) examines extruded electroactive
bioplastic film designed by Victoria Finkenstadt. (D310-1)
Indeed, cornstarch—the researchers’ polysaccharide of choice for
making the electroactive bioplastics—currently sells for less than 20
cents a pound. By comparison, a gram of a polyaniline emeraldine-based
polymer costs $58. (Note: 454 grams equal 1 pound.)
Polysaccharides are also plentiful, especially cornstarch. In 2004,
U.S. farmers planted nearly 81 million acres of corn and harvested close
to 12 billion bushels. About 280 million bushels of that total was
processed for starch. But the researchers say the electroactive
bioplastics can be made from other polysaccharide sources, too. “We’re
interested in any polysaccharides, even those from bacterial sludge and
seaweed,” says Finkenstadt.
Many polysaccharides are natural insulators. But their electrical
conductivity must be teased out by science. Otherwise, they’re unlikely
to compete with petroleum feedstocks in the nearly $1 billion U.S.
conductive-polymers market.
In nature, starch is a granular crystal comprising two kinds of
polysaccharide, a linear form called “amylose” and a branched form
called “amylopectin.” For starch to perform the tasks expected of
today’s polymers—like flexing the artificial muscle of a robotic arm—the
crystal must first be broken down by heat or mechanical force.
This is done by a process called “reactive extrusion.” Says
Finkenstadt, “The starch is gelatinized with heat and moisture,
plasticized with water, and doped—all in one continuous process.” (“Doping”
is a procedure whereby various salts called “halides” are dissolved
into the solution to improve ionic conductivity.) “Reactive extrusion
makes it feasible to use existing equipment for scale-up to an industrial
level,” she adds. “It’s also less labor-intensive and more
time-efficient.”
Finkenstadt and Willett’s tests so far indicate conductivity levels
on par with those of existing synthetic conductive polymers. Their goal is
to match that of polyaniline emeraldine-based polymers, among the most
widely used types.
“Our material uses ionic conduction, much like the nerves and muscles
in your body,” Finkenstadt explains. “The material is inert until an
electrical charge is applied,” at which point it expands or bends,
contracting only when the current stops.
The researchers hope their bioplastics’ expected compatibility with
the human body will lead to various medical applications, including
controlled-release devices like insulin pumps and nicotine patches.
In tests, the bioplastics demonstrated “reversibility of the
electrical charge”—the flow of ions back and forth across the material
as electrical charge starts and stops. Finkenstadt says the property could
benefit lithium batteries. Petroleum-based gels are now used for some of
these to facilitate recharging. But Finkenstadt plans to study whether
replacing them with the electroactive bioplastic will allow faster
recharge or longer charge storage.
Rust prevention is another potential use the ARS researchers are
investigating along with a commercial partner. According to Finkenstadt, a
3-inch-thick coating of grease is applied to virgin steel components, such
as beams and sheets, to preempt rust formation during transport to
assembly plants. Cleaning and disposal of the grease is a major problem
and expense. Finkenstadt says the same rust protection may be achieved by
spraying a micrometers-thick film of electroactive bioplastic, which can
later be cleaned off with environmentally friendly enzymes.
The patentability of these and other applications is now being
reviewed. Says Finkenstadt, “I anticipate we will have some working
prototypes in the coming months.”
By Jan Suszkiw, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
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