Nano-fibres from fish skins power Revolution
Nano-fibres from fish skins power Revolution
by Peter Kerr
Aug. 3 (BusinessDesk) –Not that many companies claim they can turn a kilo of collagen from discarded hoki skins into a fibre that could reach all the way to the Sun.
Auckland-based nano-technology start-up company Revolution Fibre Ltd does.
Using an improved
version of a laboratory model made by government science
agency Plant & Food and a $456,000 TechNZ investment grant,
the firm is building a commercial-scale electro-spinning
machine that can do just that.
The extremely fine
nano-fibres are up to 500 times thinner than a human hair
and initial applications are expected in clothing,
filtration, reinforcing, electronics and packaging. The
fibres are extremely strong due to the molecular alignment
of the polymer particles.
Revolution Fibre’s first
commercial product will be air filter mats for New Zealand
ventilation company, HRV. The biodegradable mats are created
by diffusing the nano-fibres onto a plate made from reformed
potato starch.
“It is a good use of something that
would normally be chucked away,” says Revolution Fibre
technical director, Iain Hosie. “What is good about
biomaterials is it means you stay away from plastic and
petrochemical-derived products.”
Hosie says the
world is on the cusp of a boom in electro-spinning, a
technology that’s 150 years old.
“There’s
been a lot of research, not a lot of commercialisation,”
he says.
Air filtration mats of nano-fibres provide
a much greater surface area to capture pathogens and dust
particles, while having less impact on airflow than other
mat-fibre types. As well as conventional mechanical trapping
technology of existing air filters, the new mats utilise the
enhanced entrapment properties from van der Waals forces due
to the fibres being so small. The same attraction forces
enable a gecko to stay attached to any surface it chooses to
climb.
Revolution Fibres are also going one step
further. Instead of providing microbial protection by
incorporating nano-silver particles, they're using manuka
and other plant-based extracts to neutralise pathogens.
The 18 month-old private company is initially looking to
improve its production capability, while supplying the
opportunity that HRV air filters requires.
“We’re being very careful that we don’t
over-promise, but find the right markets and keep up with
what we promise,” Hosie said. “We’re also looking for
the right commercial partner that’s willing to grow with
us.”
Hosie said working with the Plant & Food
Crown Research Institute has been an eye-opener.
“There’s any amount of innovation and commercial
potential within it, but not enough’s being picked up.
“TechNZ funding has seen this firm grow from an idea
to what could be a large export organisation in a
fast-growing emerging market,” said Richard Bentley,
general manager manufacturing and high-growth firms at the
Foundation for Research, Science and Technology. Revolution
Fibres has received more than $844,000 in TechNZ funding to
date.
The value of the global nano-fibre market is
estimated at US$102 million and is expected to grow to
$US$2.2 billion by 2020.
(BusinessDesk) 11:51:12