开发生态友好型大豆蛋白纤维:综合评论与展望

Fibers Pub Date : 2024-03-30 DOI:10.3390/fib12040031
Muneeb Tahir, Ang Li, Marguerite Moore, Ericka Ford, Thomas Theyson, A. Seyam
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引用次数: 0

摘要

二十世纪上半叶,全世界的科学界都在努力减少对羊毛和丝绸等昂贵而稀缺的动物纤维的依赖。他们的工作重点是开发再生蛋白质纤维,包括大豆、玉米蛋白和酪蛋白,以提供与天然蛋白质纤维相当的优点,如光泽的外观、保暖性和柔软的手感。第二次世界大战期间,大规模生产的石油基合成聚合物纤维的普及和成本效益降低了人们对开发大豆蛋白纤维的兴趣。由于认识到化石燃料及其衍生产品造成的生态退化,人们重新开始探索大豆蛋白等生物废料。作为一种快速生长的作物,大豆提供了丰富的副产品,为废物价值化提供了机会。大豆榨油过程产生的副产品大豆蛋白是一种高度可调的生物聚合物。大豆蛋白结构中的各种官能团使其获得了不同的宝贵特性。本综述认真研究了有关大豆蛋白纤维发展历史、大豆蛋白微结构改性方法和大豆蛋白纤维纺丝技术的学术出版物。此外,我们还就如何克服以往工作的局限性提出了基于科学的观点,并分享了使大豆蛋白副产品成为可行纺织纤维的前景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Development of Eco-Friendly Soy Protein Fiber: A Comprehensive Critical Review and Prospects
In the first half of the twentieth century, scientific communities worldwide endeavored to diminish dependence on expensive and scarce animal fibers like wool and silk. Their efforts focused on developing regenerated protein fibers, including soy, zein, and casein, to provide comparable benefits to natural protein fibers, such as lustrous appearance, warmth, and a soft feel. The popularity and cost-effectiveness of mass-produced petroleum-based synthetic polymer fibers during World War II diminished interest in developing soy protein fiber. Realizing the ecological degradation caused by fossil fuels and their derived products, a renewed drive exists to explore bio-based waste materials like soy protein. As a fast-growing crop, soy provides abundant byproducts with opportunities for waste valorization. The soybean oil extraction process produces soy protein as a byproduct, which is a highly tunable biopolymer. Various functional groups within the soy protein structure enable it to acquire different valuable properties. This review critically examines scholarly publications addressing soy protein fiber developmental history, soy protein microstructure modification methods, and soy protein fiber spinning technologies. Additionally, we provide our scientific-based views relevant to overcoming the limitations of previous work and share prospects to make soy protein byproducts viable textile fibers.
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