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Nanostructured Materials Utilized in Biopolymer-based Plastics for Food Packaging Applications

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION
Volume 55, Issue 12, Pages 1699-1723

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2012.731023

Keywords

Nanoparticle; nanocomposite; biodegradable; biodegradable film

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Most materials currently used for food packaging are nondegradable, generating environmental problems. Several biopolymers have been exploited to develop materials for ecofriendly food packaging. However, the use of biopolymers has been limited because of their usually poor mechanical and barrier properties, which may be improved by adding reinforcing compounds (fillers), forming composites. Most reinforced materials present poor matrix-filler interactions, which tend to improve with decreasing filler dimensions. The use of fillers with at least one nanoscale dimension (nanoparticles) produces nanocomposites. Nanoparticles have proportionally larger surface area than their microscale counterparts, which favors the filler-matrix interactions and the performance of the resulting material. Besides nanoreinforcements, nanoparticles can have other functions when added to a polymer, such as antimicrobial activity, etc. in this review paper, the structure and properties of main kinds of nanostructured materials which have been studied to use as nanofiller in biopolymer matrices are overviewed, as well as their effects and applications.

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