Nanostructured
and Advanced Designs from Biomass and
Mineral Residues: Multifunctional Biopolymer Hydrogels and Hybrid
Films Reinforced with Exfoliated Mica Nanosheets
Transforming potential
waste materials into high-value-added sustainable
materials with advanced properties is one of the key targets of the
emerging green circular economy. Natural mica (muscovite) is abundant
in the mining industry, which is commonly regarded as a byproduct
and gangue mineral flowing to waste rock and mine tailings. Similarly,
chitin is the second-most abundant biomass resource on Earth after
cellulose, extracted as a byproduct from the exoskeleton of crustaceans,
fungal mycelia, and mushroom wastes. In this study, exfoliated mica
nanosheets were individualized using a mechanochemical process and
incorporated into regenerated chitin matrix through an alkali dissolution
system (KOH/urea) to result in a multifunctional, hybrid hydrogel,
and film design. The hydrogels displayed a hierarchical and open nanoporous
structure comprising an enhanced, load-bearing double-cross-linked
polymeric chitin network strengthened by mica nanosheets possessing
high stiffness after high-temperature curing, while the hybrid films
(HFs) exhibited favorable UV-shielding properties, optical transparency,
and dielectric properties. These hybrid designs derived from industrial
residues pave the way toward sustainable applications for many future
purposes, such as wearable devices and tissue engineering/drug delivery