Magazine Article

Making Plant-Support Structures From Waste Plant Fiber

TBMG-1647

02/01/2006

Abstract
Content

Environmentally benign, biodegradable structures for supporting growing plants can be made in a process based on recycling of such waste plant fiber materials as wheat straw or of such derivative materials as paper and cardboard. Examples of structures that can be made in this way include plant plugs, pots, planter-lining mats, plant fences, and root and shoot barriers. No chemical binders are used in the process. First, the plant material is chopped into smaller particles. The particles are leached with water or steam to remove material that can inhibit plant growth, yielding a fibrous slurry. If the desired structures are plugs or sheets, then the slurry is formed into the desired shapes in a pulp molding subprocess. If the desired structures are root and shoot barriers, pots, or fences, then the slurry is compression-molded to the desired shapes in a heated press. The processed materials in these structures have properties similar to those of commercial pressboard, but unlike pressboard, these materials contain no additives. These structures have been found to withstand one growth cycle, even when wet.

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Citation
"Making Plant-Support Structures From Waste Plant Fiber," Mobility Engineering, February 1, 2006.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 1, 2006
Product Code
TBMG-1647
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English