4.7 Article

Carbon Dot Biopolymer-Based Flexible Functional Films for Antioxidant and Food Monitoring Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED POLYMER MATERIALS
Volume 4, Issue 12, Pages 9323-9340

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsapm.2c015799323

Keywords

carbon dot; TPS; ?-carrageenan; polymer nanocomposites; antioxidant properties; food monitoring applications

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Flexible, antioxidant, and UV-resistant polymeric thin films reinforced with heteroatom-doped carbon dots have been fabricated using a simple physical compounding strategy. These films, along with CD-reinforced thermoplastic starch/kappa-carrageenan hybrid films, exhibit strong antioxidant activity for improving the shelf-life of agro-products.
Heteroatom-doped carbon dot (CD)-reinforced flexible, antioxidant, and UV-resistant polymeric thin films have been fabricated by a facile physical compounding strategy associated with the 'cast and peel' technique. The prepared CDs were found to be stable in aqueous media because of their zeta potential value (-5.85 mV). There was no significant change in the zeta potential values during 7 days of storage, indicating the long-term stability of CPCDs. CD-reinforced thermoplastic starch (TPS)/kappa-carrageenan hybrid films have been developed as antioxidants to improve the shelf-life of agro-products. Besides this, they also qualified for mechanical strength (>40 MPa), transparency (-,77%), nondeteriorative dimensional integrity at a high relative humidity (-,97%), and UV-resistant properties. For assessing the food preservation behavior, the leaching of CDs also has been studied by time-dependent sustained release in different food simulant media, where it showed a gradual alteration of entrapment efficacy in high-polarity gradient environments. The mechanism of CD release has been obtained from the non-Fickian fittings of the initial preplateaued kinetic data. Surprisingly, when these nanodots were arrested inside the polymer matrix, the film also showed excellent water vapor impermeability, low moisture retention, sufficient toughness, and superficial compliance to external flexing and stretching. Also, CD-based TPS/kappa-carrageenan films exhibited strong antioxidant activity, as determined by 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (>85%) and 2,2 '-azinobis-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid assays (>90%). Thus, these hybrid films could be promoted as ideal alternatives for food packaging with their thin, flexible, tough, antioxidant, and moisture -impermeable properties.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available