Abstract

PurposeThe objective of the present study was to better understand the potential environmental benefit of using vine shoots (ViShs), an agricultural residue, as filler in composite materials. For that purpose, a comparative life cycle assessment (LCA) of a rigid tray made of virgin poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) PHBV, polylactic acid (PLA) or polypropylene (PP), and increasing content of ViSh particles was performed. The contribution of each processing step in the life cycle on the different environmental impacts was identified and discussed. Furthermore, the balance between the environmental and the economic benefits of composite trays was discussed.MethodsThis work presents a cradle-to-grave LCA of composite rigid trays. Once collected in vineyards, ViShs were dried and ground using dry fractionation processes, then mixed with a polymer matrix by melt extrusion to produce compounds that were finally injected to obtain rigid trays for food packaging. The density of each component was taken into account in order to compare trays with the same volume. The maximum filler content was set to 30 vol% according to recommendations from literature and industrial data. The ReCiPe 2016 Midpoint Hierarchist (H) methodology was used for the assessment using the cutoff system model.Results and discussionThis study showed that bioplastics are currently less eco-friendly than PP. This is in part due to the fact that LCA does not account for, in existing tools, effects of microplastic accumulation and that bioplastic technologies are still under development with low tonnage. This study also demonstrated the environmental interest of the development of biocomposites by the incorporation of ViSh particles. The minimal filler content of interest depended on the matrices and the impact categories. Concerning global warming, composite trays had less impact than virgin plastic trays from 5 vol% for PHBV or PLA and from 20 vol% for PP. Concerning PHBV, the only biodegradable polymer in natural conditions in this study, the price and the impact on global warming are reduced by 25% and 20% respectively when 30 vol% of ViSh are added.ConclusionThe benefit of using vine shoots in composite materials from an environmental and economical point of view was demonstrated. As a recommendation, the polymer production step, which constitutes the most important impact, should be optimized and the maximum filler content in composite materials should be increased.

Highlights

  • In viticulture, every winter after pruning, large quantities of vine wood are produced that are currently underutilized

  • This study assessed the environmental impacts of composite trays made of PP, polylactic acid (PLA), or PHBV, and increasing content of vine shoots (ViShs) particle filler, based on a comparative life cycle assessment (LCA)

  • It was shown that bioplastic matrices, i.e., PLA and PHBV, which are considered to be eco-friendly, displayed higher environmental impacts than fossil-based polypropylene

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Every winter after pruning, large quantities of vine wood are produced that are currently underutilized. Regarding the ambitious goals set by the European community for a bioeconomy, which include the decarbonization of the economy through an 80-95% decrease of CO2 emissions by 2050 (Scarlat et al 2015), ViShs present a valuable resource for implementing decarbonizing recovery strategies. These strategies can be achieved in a biorefinery context, where cascading treatments of ViSh are investigated to produce value-added products, including the production of lignocellulosic fillers for biocomposite applications (Kilinc et al 2016; David et al 2019, 2020a). ViShs present a great opportunity in the field of biocomposites, with a potential application being rigid food packaging that is biodegradable in natural conditions (David et al 2020c; Guillard et al 2018)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call