Green Processes for Chitin and Chitosan Production from Insects: Current State, Challenges, and Opportunities
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 2025-04-26
- View Source
Summary
Background
Chitin and chitosan are valuable biopolymers with applications ranging from food to pharmaceuticals. Traditionally sourced from crustaceans, the rising demand paired with insect sector development has led to exploring insect biomass as an alternative source. Conventional extraction processes rely on hazardous chemicals, raising environmental concerns. Insects demonstrate notable efficiency in converting biomass into new food resources and contain significant amounts of chitin, ranging from 4.5% to 50% of dry weight depending on species and development stages.
Objective
This review aims to systematically compare chitin and chitosan yields across insect life stages and byproducts, evaluate reported green extraction workflows across over 30 processes from 16 studies, and assess sustainability considerations including solvent recovery, recycling potential, and standardized metrics. Additionally, methods for chitin quantification are reviewed to identify inconsistencies and their potential impact on reported yields.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Polymers,
- Study Type:Review,
- Source: 10.3390/polym17091185