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ARS chemist Milagros Hojilla-Evangelista has found
a way to make a high-value glue extender for plywood production out of corn
germ, a byproduct left over after the corn oil is removed from corn germ meal.
Here she tests the breaking point of plywood laminated with vegetable based
glue. Click the image for more information about it.
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Researchers Develop New Glue from Corn
By Jan Suszkiw
September 1, 2009 After the oil is extracted from
corn germ meal, the corn germ is typically fed to poultry and other livestock
animals. But a new, value-added use could be on tap for this
leftover, thanks to studies by an Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
scientist in Peoria, Ill.
There, at the agencys
Plant
Polymer Research Unit, chemist
Milagros
Hojilla-Evangelista has determined that corn germ can be used as a protein
extender for plywood glues, potentially opening the door to a new market for
the agricultural byproduct. Glue extenders reduce the amount of main binder, or
resin, used in such glues and enhance their adhesive action.
The conventional extender for most plywood glues is industrial-grade wheat
flour, according to Hojilla-Evangelista. However, she has sought to expand the
list of agricultural extenders in the event glue manufacturers needed a
comparable alternativefor example, because of a spike in wheat-flour
prices or drop in supply.
Drawing on earlier work with soy-flour-based glues, Hojilla-Evangelista
devised a corn-germ formulation for use in sprayline coating, a procedure that
applies a liquid adhesive to wood surfaces using overhead nozzles.
In tests, she applied the corn-germ-based glue to one side of 12-inch by
12-inch southern pine veneers, then hot-pressed them following
industry-standard conditions to produce three-ply panels. Her analysis of the
material found the bonding strength of the corn-germ-based glue to be similar
to that of the wheat-flour-based formula. Its viscosity and mixing properties
also compared well, adds Hojilla-Evangelista, who first reported the findings
in June 2008 at the Corn Utilization and Technology Conference in Kansas City,
Mo.
Her focus now is increasing the amount of corn germ used in the glue to try
and reduce the amount of resin needed, which would potentially cut
manufacturing costs.
Read
more about this research in the September 2009 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.