Currently, one of the most common food packaging is plastic, which accounts for about ten per cent of all waste in Lithuania. In our country, about fifty thousand tons of plastic packaging appear on the market, about fifteen thousand of which are made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) packaging, naturally decomposing within 400-500 years.
Replacing only one - three per cent of the PET plastic composition by crystals, the material would become about thirty per cent stronger. The research, carried out in VGTU laboratories on Polymer degradation, should foresee the time, necessary for the decay of the plastic with nano-cellulose crystals: they believe that the innovative supplement might reduce the decay time more than twice.
"While the world is facing new economic and ecological challenges, such as specific ecological taxes, more active sorting processes and transport weight reduction – we are developing production of cellulose nanocrystals, the material which is one hundred pro cent eco-friendly, and can match carbon-fibre in its strength. In the light of the ongoing research and the interested investors, we discovered a niche which can become a successful trade over the next 5-8 years", - ambitiously says Martynas Juršys, the fourth year student from the Faculty of Business Management at VGTU. Doctor Ingrida Bružaitė, the Associate Professor of the Department of Chemistry and Bioenergy at VGTU, joined this project, which started while Martynas was writing his Bachelor's theses.
According to the student of VGTU, we can use cellulose nanocrystals not only for the production of bioplastics, but also for nano-cellulose. This material is comparable with carbon fibre in its strength. We can apply cellulose nanocrystals in a variety of industries, such as construction, textile, aviation, etc.
They calculated that the introduction of technologies for extraction of cellulose nanocrystals from hemp fibres, using ultrasounds, and application of the material for the production of various products in an industrial enterprise would cost about seventy thousand Litas. This investment could pay off during three or five years.
VGTU student M. Juršys and Doctor of Chemical Sciences I. Bružaitė are involved in the Innovative Business Promotion (INOVEKS) project, and after consultations in the North Campus Technology Park, founded small company "Metanoja". Concerning business development, the promising start up is already communicating with prospective investors and representatives of venture capital funds.