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Grads Look To Mushrooms For Eco-building Material
TROY, NY (AP) - Eben Bayer grew up on a farm in Vermont learning the intricacies
of mushroom harvesting with his father. Now the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
graduate is using that experience to create an organic insulation made from
mushrooms.
More at home on a pizza, mushrooms certainly aren’t a typical
building material, but Bayer thought they just might work when given the assignment
two
years ago to create a sustainable insulation.
Combining his agricultural knowledge with colleague Gavin McIntyre’s interest
in sustainable technology, the two created their patented “Greensulate” formula,
an organic, fire-retardant board made of water, flour, oyster mushroom spores
and perlite, a mineral blend found in potting soil. They’re hoping the
invention will soon be part of the growing market for eco-friendly products.
Bringing the insulation to market is still at least a year away though, said
McIntyre, and will require much more research and work, not to mention more
sophisticated equipment and a better work space.
“
We’ve been growing the material under our beds,” said McIntyre, adding
that they’ve applied for a grant from the National Collegiate Inventors
and Innovators Alliance.
The two young developers - Bayer is 21, McIntyre, 22 - graduated in May from
RPI with dual majors in mechanical engineering and product design and innovation.
“
I think it has a lot of potential, and it could make a big difference in people’s
llives,” said RPI Professor Burt Swersy, whose Inventor’s Studio
course inspired the product’s creation. “it’s sustainable,
and enviro-friendly, it’s not based on petrochemicals and doesn’t
require much energy or cost to make it.”
The two say recent tests at the National Institutue of Standards and Technology
have shown it to be competitive with most insulation brands on the market.
A 1-inch-thick sample of the perlite-mushroom composite had a 2.9 R-value,
the
measure of a substance’s ability to resist heat flow. Commercially produced
fiberglass insulation typically has an R-value between 2.7 and 3.7 per inch
of thickness, according to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.
With a rapidly increasing global population, a limited supply of natural
resources, and rising energy prices, eco-friendly housing products are selling
fast. Numerous
companies have carved out their niche selling “green” building
supplies such as recycled fiber board and plant-based paints. The Environmental
Home Center
in Seattle sells an insulation made from denim scraps and another made from
100 percent recycled paper among their many green building products.
After looking through about 800 patents, though, Bayer and McIntyre realized
they’d hit upon a relatively original idea. Unlike many green building
products, Greensulate isn’t made from pre-existing materials. It requires
little energy or expense to produce because it’s grown from organic material.
Here’s how it works: A mixture of water, mineral particles, starch
and hydrogen peroxide are poured into 7-by-7 inch molds and then injected with
living mushroom cells. The hydrogen peroxide is used to prevent the growth
of other
specimens within the material.
Placed in a dark environment, the cells start to grow, digesting the starch
as food and sprouting thousands of root-like cellular strands. A week to two
weeks
later, a 1-inch-thick panel of insulation is fully grown. It’s then dried
to prevent fungal growth, making it unlikely to trigger mold and fungus allergies,
according to Bayer. The finished product resembles a giant cracker in texture.
“
It really allows for a myriad of uses,” said McIntyre. He said they’ve
envisioned modifying the product to make structural panels that could be grown
and assembled onsite to produce sustainable homes.
“
Green building materials should be evaluated on the idea of cradle to cradle,” said
Evelyne Michaut of the Natural Resources Defense Council.
In the cradle-to-cradle model, goods should either be fully biodegradable
or reusable, limiting waste and pollution, according to Michaut, a sustainable
city advocate from Santa Monica, CA.
“
That’s the ultimate environmental reference,” she said, adding
that it seems like Greensulate is on its way to fulfilling that criteria.
For Bayer and McIntyre, their next step will be creating larger pieces of
Greensulate to use in building a wall. From there, they’ll perform further testing
to see how the product stands up to various elements, including saturation and
humidity. McIntyre said they have one two-year-old sample that’s been
exposed to the elements and shown no sign of degradation.
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