作者
Seohui Jung,Yufei Cui,Morgan Barnes,Chinmay C. Satam,Shenxiang Zhang,Reaz A. Chowdhury,Aparna Adumbumkulath,Onur Sahin,Corwin Miller,Seyed Mohammad Sajadi,Lucas M. Sassi,Yue Ji,Matthew R. Bennett,Miao Yu,Jefferson Friguglietti,Fatima A. Merchant,Rafael Verduzco,Soumyabrata Roy,Róbert Vajtai,J. Carson Meredith,Jeffrey P. Youngblood,Nikhil Koratkar,Muhammad M. Rahman,Pulickel M. Ajayan
摘要
Abstract Hunger and chronic undernourishment impact over 800 million people, which translates to ≈10.7% of the world's population. While countries are increasingly making efforts to reduce poverty and hunger by pursuing sustainable energy and agricultural practices, a third of the food produced around the globe still is wasted and never consumed. Reducing food shortages is vital in this effort and is often addressed by the development of genetically modified produce or chemical additives and inedible coatings, which create additional health and environmental concerns. Herein, a multifunctional bio‐nanocomposite comprised largely of egg‐derived polymers and cellulose nanomaterials as a conformal coating onto fresh produce that slows down food decay by retarding ripening, dehydration, and microbial invasion is reported. The coating is edible, washable, and made from readily available inexpensive or waste materials, which makes it a promising economic alternative to commercially available fruit coatings and a solution to combat food wastage that is rampant in the world.