Bacterial Cellulose: Difference between revisions
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(Added some more links under the “External Links” section) |
(Added some more links under the “External Links” section) |
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*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_cellulose The Wikipedia Page on Bacterial Cellulose] | *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_cellulose The Wikipedia Page on Bacterial Cellulose] | ||
**[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komagataeibacter_hansenii The Wikipedia Page on Komagataeibacter hansenii] | **[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komagataeibacter_hansenii The Wikipedia Page on Komagataeibacter hansenii] | ||
*[https://youtu.be/0zM5jiZJ5p0?si=aKm3BRJtwlGlleq9 A Video by the YouTube Channel “TheThoughtEmporium” Titled “Turning Vodka into Toilet Paper (Reverse [[Nilered]] ) “ ] ( ‘’’~18 Minute Watch’’’ ) | |||
Revision as of 19:35, 17 January 2026
Basics
- Cellulose made via (Non-Pathogenic, Industrial ) Bacteria, rather than the usual Cellulosic Biomass
- In particular interest is Komagataeibacter hansenii which was isolated from Kombucha SCOBY and produces a SCOBY-esque Pellicle of (near) Pure Cellulose
- Need to dig into papers on how pure it is/typical impurities
Main Applications
- Non-Plastic Vegan Leather (Re: SCOBY Leather )
- Precision Fermentation
- Especially for certain Industrial Wastewater Treatment Streams as an alternative to “simple” Aerobic Digestion etc
- Unlike mote conventional routes that either produce no product (other that Sludge/ Digestate ), or (Conventional) Anaerobic Digestion which produces a comparatively low quality product ( Biogas ), if designed properly Bacterial Cellulose could turn waste streams into High Value, In Demand products
- Might be some difficulty in producing medical grade cellulose if using certain waste streams,? Need to look into this further
- This probably falls under Waste Valorization / Waste Recovery to an extent
- Unlike mote conventional routes that either produce no product (other that Sludge/ Digestate ), or (Conventional) Anaerobic Digestion which produces a comparatively low quality product ( Biogas ), if designed properly Bacterial Cellulose could turn waste streams into High Value, In Demand products
- Especially for certain Industrial Wastewater Treatment Streams as an alternative to “simple” Aerobic Digestion etc