ABSTRACT
Addressing the impacts of climate change and global warming has become an urgent priority for the planet's well-being. In recent decades the great potential of fungal-based products with characteristics equal to, or even outperforming, classic petroleum-derived products has been acknowledged. These new materials present the added advantage of having a reduced carbon footprint, less environmental impact and contributing to the shift away from a fossil-based economy. This study focused on the production of insulation panels using fungal mycelium and lignocellulosic materials as substrates. The process was optimized, starting with the selection of Trametes versicolor, Pleurotus ostreatus, P. eryngii, Ganoderma carnosum and Fomitopsis pinicola isolates, followed by the evaluation of three grain spawn substrates (millet, wheat and a 1:1 mix of millet and wheat grains) for mycelium propagation, and finishing with the production of various mycelium-based composites using five wood by-products and waste materials (pine sawdust, oak shavings, tree of heaven wood chips, wheat straw and shredded beech wood). The obtained biomaterials were characterized for internal structure by X-ray micro-CT, thermal transmittance using a thermoflowmeter and moisture absorption. The results showed that using a wheat and millet 1:1 (w/w) mix is the best option for spawn production regardless of the fungal isolate. In addition, the performance of the final composites was influenced both by the fungal isolate and the substrate used, with the latter having a stronger effect on the measured properties. The study shows that the most promising sustainable insulating biomaterial was created using T. versicolor grown on wheat straw.
ABSTRACT
Novel inorganic-organic hybrid copolymers based on vinyl- or (3-mercaptopropyl)-trimethoxysilane and an organically modified zirconium-oxocluster were investigated as a wood preservation treatment. The copolymers were prepared using a modified sol-gel strategy not involving alkoxysilane pre-hydrolysis and were applied on wood through a dip coating method. Even though the copolymers were mainly present on the surface of the wood, EDX analysis showed also a uniform distribution of silicon and zirconium in the cell wall but not in the lumina. The grafting of the copolymers on wood was confirmed through FTIR, (13)C and (29)Si MAS NMR analysis. The copolymer obtained from (3-mercaptopropyl)trimethoxysilane was post-functionalized with the methacrylic ester of thymol; introduced for testing as a biocide. Preliminary accelerated biological tests against the brown rot fungus Coniophora puteana, showed resistance to the fungus for the samples coated with the vinyltrimethoxysilane copolymer, while uneven results were obtained for the samples coated with the (3-mercaptopropyl)trimethoxysilane copolymer, even when functionalized with the ester of thymol.
ABSTRACT
The natural durability of four Argentinean species of Prosopis and one of Acacia was evaluated in laboratory tests, according to European standards, using three brown rot and one white rot fungi. These tests were complemented by assessing the wood chemical composition. All the species were from moderately slightly durable to very durable (classes 4-1), and in all cases the heartwood was the most resistant to fungal attack. Chemical extractives content (organic, aqueous, tannic and phenolic) was higher in the heartwood. However, species durability was not related to extractive contents nor with wood density. Instead, it is possible that extractives could contribute to natural durability in different ways, including the effects related to the antioxidant properties of some of them.