Search results for: COFFEE SILVERSKIN - Bridge of Knowledge

Search

Search results for: COFFEE SILVERSKIN

Filters

total: 4

clear all filters


Chosen catalog filters

  • Category

  • Year

  • Options

clear Chosen catalog filters disabled

Search results for: COFFEE SILVERSKIN

  • Inhibition of Polymer Photodegradation by Incorporation of Coffee Silverskin

    Publication

    - Proceedings - Year 2021

    Over the last years, the trend associated with the incorporation of materials from renewable resources into polymer technology is getting significantly more vital. Researchers are trying to transfer the properties of natural raw materials into the polymer world. Therefore, different natural materials are more often investigated as potential additives for polymers. Such an effect is noted for the coffee industry by-products, such...

    Full text available to download

  • Coffee Silverskin as a Multifunctional Waste Filler for High-Density Polyethylene Green Composites

    Publication

    - Journal of Composites Science - Year 2021

    This work aims to describe the coffee silverskin effect as a lignocellulosic waste filler for high-density polyethylene (HDPE) composites development. The main task was to determine various modification effects resulting from the complex chemical composition of coffee silverskin containing compounds with potential antioxidative properties, including caffeine, polyphenols, tannins, or melanoidins. The processing, thermal, physicochemical,...

    Full text available to download

  • Coffee silverskin as a potential bio-based antioxidant for polymer materials: Brief review

    Publication

    - Proceedings - Year 2021

    Coffee silverskin is one of the by-products generated by the coffee industry. Although it is not the most burdensome one, because it stands only for ~4.2 wt % of coffee, it seems like an auspicious raw material for industrial processes. Coffee silverskin is characterized by a relatively low moisture content of ~5–7%, so it often does not require quite energy-consuming drying processes. The chemical composition of coffee silverskin,...

    Full text available to download

  • By-Products from Food Industry as a Promising Alternative for the Conventional Fillers for Wood–Polymer Composites

    Publication

    - Polymers - Year 2021

    The present paper describes the application of two types of food-industry by-products, brewers’ spent grain (BSG), and coffee silverskin (ŁK) as promising alternatives for the conventional beech wood flour (WF) for wood–polymer composites. The main goal was to investigate the impact of partial and complete WF substitution by BSG and ŁK on the processing, structure, physicochemical, mechanical, and thermal properties of resulting...

    Full text available to download