Research Keyword: chitin

Mechanical properties of dense mycelium-bound composites under accelerated tropical weathering conditions

Researchers developed a sustainable alternative to traditional particleboard using mushroom mycelium (fungal root structure) grown on agricultural waste like sawdust and palm fruit remnants. When exposed to hot, humid tropical conditions for 35 days, the material’s strength decreased significantly, but applying a protective oil coating helped preserve tensile strength. The study shows that with improvements to manufacturing processes, these mushroom-based composites could replace harmful formaldehyde-based particleboards in indoor construction.

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Crab vs. Mushroom: A Review of Crustacean and Fungal Chitin in Wound Treatment

Chitin, a natural material found in crab shells and mushrooms, can be used to make wound dressings that speed up healing and fight infection. The review compares these two sources, finding that crab-derived chitin has been studied more extensively and has several commercial products available, while mushroom-derived chitin offers advantages like lower cost and easier processing. Both types work by promoting cell growth, stopping bleeding, and killing bacteria, making them promising alternatives to traditional wound dressings for treating difficult-to-heal wounds.

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Fungal and Microalgal Chitin: Structural Differences, Functional Properties, and Biomedical Applications

Chitin is a natural fiber found in mushroom cell walls and algae that can be extracted and used for medical applications like wound healing and drug delivery. Traditional chitin from shellfish shells contains heavy metals and requires harsh chemicals to extract, but chitin from mushrooms and algae is cleaner, more sustainable, and can be grown year-round. Scientists have developed environmentally friendly extraction methods using special solvents and enzymes that preserve the chitin’s useful properties. This makes fungal and algal chitin promising alternatives for creating biomedical materials and packaging.

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