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No more plastic wrap? Students create novel biobased packaging for cucumbers

A dip in the biobased liquid gives cucumbers a protective film. Innovative idea will be presented in the international BioDesign Challenge competition.
cucumbers on a plate covered with biobased liquid
Biobased packaging protects the cucumbers from damage and keeps them fresh longer by providing them with water.

Packaging protects fruits and vegetables from damage and contaminants keeping them fresh longer, but it also produces a hefty amount of plastic waste. What if there could be a renewable and biodegradable alternative for the millions of pieces of plastic wrap thrown away every day?

This real-world problem sparked a creative solution from four Aalto students taking part in the Design Meets Biomaterials course, Ena Naito, Louise Kallai, Emilia Ikävalko, and Sari Kupiainen. They have designed a completely new way of packaging cucumbers – a biobased liquid solution in which cucumbers are dipped. It forms a transparent film that dries up in a few seconds. The film can be washed off as a whole.

Later in June, the team will present their idea -- called DipWrap -- in the international . Over 50 student teams across the globe will present their projects combining biotechnology and design to a panel of leaders in academia, industry, art, and design.

Yellowish biobased liquid in a cup in laboratory
Biobased liquid in which the cucumbers are dipped.

The dip mixture contains a jelly-like, red algae-based substance called agar agar, carnauba wax dispersion and dispersed cellulose nanocrystals (CNC). One of the challenges the team faced was that they couldn’t find any previous studies on similar solutions.

‘We went to the lab every week and tested several materials. We came up with the idea of using agar, because we had used it for cooking. We added also wax to make more waterproof-film and CNC for its antibacterial properties,’ says Louise Kallai, a Master student in Chemical Engineering who is spending a year in student exchange at 911±¬ÁÏÍø.

The team believes that the dipping treatment could also be used for other vegetables and fruits as well.

‘This is a baby step, but hopefully it’s a beginning of something that could be commercialised and could spark interest in this kind of packaging. It also encourages people to question our daily choices,’ says Ena Naito, a master’s student in contemporary design.

The project was a part of , a collaboration between The School of Chemical Engineering and The School of Arts, Design and Architecture, which aims to inspire students and researchersto create new concepts for bioeconomy by combining design, business thinking and natural materials science.

Follow the team's journey on : @dip.wrap

Photos are provided by the team.

Louise Kallai, Ena Naito, Emilia Ikävalko, and Sari Kupiainen
DipWrap team: Louise Kallai, a Master’s student in Material Science and Chemical Engineering, Ena Naito, a Master’s student in Contemporary Design, and Emilia Ikävalko and Sari Kupiainen, Bachelor's students in Chemical Engineering
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