Old bread becomes new textiles

Old bread becomes new textiles
Credit: University of Borås

Is it possible to create textiles from old bread? Akram Zamani, senior lecturer in resource recycling at the University of Borås, wants to find out. And she has already come a long way.

"We have seen that much of the from is from and therefore we wanted to see how we could turn it into a new product," says Akram Zamani.

Filamentous will be grown on bread waste in bioreactors, and will then be used in two different processes to create yarn and to produce nonwoven textiles (see fact box).

"When the bread has become a biomass of fungi, we remove the protein which in turn can be used as food or animal feed. We use the cell wall fibres that remain of the fungi partly to spin a yarn, and partly to create nonwoven fabrics."

"We have done a large part of the cultivation already, and it has worked well, so now we are working on a wet spinning process to create yarn, and test different methods to improve the yarn's properties," she says.

It is hoped that the fungus will be able to be transformed and used for clothing, medical applications, or furniture textiles. During the first two years, the product will be made on a smaller scale, in order to be scaled up during the third and fourth years.

Old bread becomes new textiles
Credit: University of Borås

Unique research

"There is no previous research on this; therefore it is difficult to know what to expect," says Akram Zamani and continues:

"We get the bread from a local grocery store, and we are able to collect as much as we need, which gives us the opportunity to test different things and make sure it becomes a good product."

Provided by University of Borås

Citation: Old bread becomes new textiles (2019, June 11) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-06-bread-textiles.html
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