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Overview of renewable polysaccharide-based composites for biodegradable food packaging applications

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 480-492

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1gc03898b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31960326, 31971741, 32160394]

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This study discusses the application of renewable polysaccharides and their composites in biodegradable food packaging, covering different types of renewable polysaccharides and their advantages. The research focuses on synthetic strategies, microstructure, properties, and potential applications, and proposes future research directions.
Renewable environmentally friendly polysaccharides and their composites meet the requirements of green chemistry, which have been extensively used for biodegradable food packaging applications. Renewable polysaccharides include cellulose, nanocellulose, hemicellulose, chitosan, starch, pectin, etc. The present study is divided into biomass-based composites (cellulose, nanocellulose, and hemicellulose), chitosan-based composites, and other polysaccharide-based composites (starch, pectin, etc.). Special attention has been paid to various synthetic strategies, intrinsic microstructures, inherent properties, and potential food packaging applications. The differences among these renewable polysaccharide-based composites were comparably reviewed with detailed examples. The problems and future research on renewable polysaccharide-based composites are suggested for biodegradable food packaging applications. It is expected that the potential superiority of polysaccharide-based composites in food packaging will promote the development of green chemistry.

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