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Singapore Scientists transformed fruit leftovers into antibacterial bandages

Scientists at Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore have found a method to reuse food without wasting them by turning discarded durian husks into antibacterial gel bandages. This process extracts cellulose powder from the fruit's husks

Scientists at Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore have found a method to reuse food without wasting them by turning discarded durian husks into antibacterial gel bandages.

This process extracts cellulose powder from the fruit’s husks after they are sliced and freeze-dried, then mixes it with glycerol. The mixture later becomes soft hydrogel, which is then cut into bandage strips.

Director of the food science and technology programme at NTU Professor William Chen said, “In Singapore, we consume about 12 million durians a year, so besides the flesh, we can’t do much about the husk and the seeds and this cause environmental pollution.” The fruit’s husks, which make up more than half of the composition of durians, are usually discarded and incinerated, contributing to environmental waste.

He also added that the technology can also turn other food waste like soy beans and spent grains, into hydrogel, helping limit the country’s food waste.

Compared to conventional bandages, the organo-hydrogel bandages are also able to keep wound areas cooler and moist, which can help accelerate healing.

According to the researchers, usage of waste materials and yeast for the antimicrobial bandages is more cost effective than the production of conventional bandages, whose antimicrobial properties come from more expensive metallic compounds like silver or copper ions.

A durian wholeseller, Tan Eng Chuan, said he goes through at least 30 crates of durians a day during durian season – as much as 1,800 kg. Being able to use the parts of the fruit that are ordinarily discarded, he said, was an innovation that would make enjoying it “more sustainable”.

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