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Biodegradable transparent wood could soon replace plastic

Around 400 million tonnes of plastic waste is produced across the globe each year.

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Biodegradable transparent wood. (Prodyut Dhar via SWNS)

By Pol Allingham via SWNS

Biodegradable transparent wood could soon replace plastics for see-through packaging and biomedical tools, according to a new study.

The new renewable and biodegradable material could reduce the strain on the environment and reduce fuel bills by being five times more efficient than glass.

Around 400 million tonnes of plastic waste is produced across the globe each year with
single-use plastic increasingly the culprit but transparent wood is reportedly emerging as one of the most promising future substitutes.

Prodyut Dhar, an author of the study and assistant professor at the Indian Institute of Technology’s biochemical engineering school, said: "Transparent wood as a material can replace the environmentally harmful petroleum-based plastics such as polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), acrylic, polyethylene etc.

“Plastics can also be used as a substitute for glass which is naturally fragile.

“However, transparent wood is an even better alternative from an ecological perspective as observed in our life-cycle analysis.”

The wood was originally created in 1992 by German scientist Seigfried Fink, by removing the lignin content in wood and trading it for transparent, plastic materials.

Lignin is a naturally occurring biopolymer supporting plant tissue, and unlike plastics, it isn’t toxic and can biodegrade and researchers have developed it since its creation.

Writing in the journal Science of The Total Environment study, the authors said producing transparent wood using sodium chlorite to remove the lignin had far fewer environmental impacts than previous methods of creation.

Though end-of-life analysis showed transparent wood is less environmentally friendly than glass, it revealed it is better than producing polyethylene - the most commonly used plastic in the world.

This indicated that researchers need to improve production technology.

Anish Chathoth, an assistant professor at Kerala Agricultural University’s College of Forestry, in India, and a transparent wood researcher at the Institute of Wood Science and Technology, Bangalore, said transparent wood has great physical, mechanical and optical properties.

He said: “Transparent wood is mostly developed using thin slices of wood, and has good strength as that of regular wood but is lighter in weight.

“The scope for imparting multiple and advanced properties through the incorporation of specialized materials makes it a unique bio-based substrate for versatile applications.

“In recent times transparent wood has been used in construction, energy storage, flexible electronics and packaging applications.

“Given the growing concerns about the environmental impact of petroleum-based plastic materials, transparent wood has a role in maintaining environmental sustainability.”

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