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  4. Mycelium-Based Composites in Art, Architecture, and Interior Design: A Review
 
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Mycelium-Based Composites in Art, Architecture, and Interior Design: A Review

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Sydor, Maciej 
Bonenberg, Agata
Doczekalska, Beata 
Cofta, Grzegorz 
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
Journal
Polymers
ISSN
2073-4360
DOI
10.3390/polym14010145
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/14/1/145
Volume
14 (1)
Pages from-to
art. 145
Abstract (EN)
Mycelium-based composites (MBCs) have attracted growing attention due to their role in the development of eco-design methods. We concurrently analysed scientific publications, patent documents, and results of our own feasibility studies to identify the current design issues and technologies used. A literature inquiry in scientific and patent databases (WoS, Scopus, The Lens, Google Patents) pointed to 92 scientific publications and 212 patent documents. As a part of our own technological experiments, we have created several prototype products used in architectural interior design. Following the synthesis, these sources of knowledge can be concluded: 1. MBCs are inexpensive in production, ecological, and offer a high artistic value. Their weaknesses are insufficient load capacity, unfavourable water affinity, and unknown reliability. 2. The scientific literature shows that the material parameters of MBCs can be adjusted to certain needs, but there are almost infinite combinations: properties of the input biomaterials, characteristics of the fungi species, and possible parameters during the growth and subsequent processing of the MBCs. 3. The patent documents show the need for development: an effective method to increase the density and the search for technologies to obtain a more homogeneous internal structure of the composite material. 4. Our own experiments with the production of various everyday objects indicate that some disadvantages of MBCs can be considered advantages. Such an unexpected advantage is the interesting surface texture resulting from the natural inhomogeneity of the internal structure of MBCs, which can be controlled to some extent.
Keywords (EN)
  • biomaterials

  • bio-composites

  • bio design

  • mycelium-based composites

  • biopolymers

  • interior design

  • architecture

  • wood

  • mycelium

  • fungi

  • patent documents

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
December 31, 2021
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