Making menstrual pads from succulents could improve access to sanitary products

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Alex Odundu
Alex Odundu

A drought-tolerant succulent plant could be used to make menstrual pads, according to international researchers who believe it could be a useful alternative in semi-arid, low and middle-income countries where sanitary products can be hard to come by. Agave sisalana plants are drought-tolerant and can be harvested for high-strength, water-absorbent fibres. The researchers treated these fibres to produce a fluffy material which they then tested in a prototype menstrual pad. They say the material was capable of absorbing more water than a commercially available cotton pad, and by their estimates producing pads from the plant would have a carbon footprint comparable to mainstream materials such as cotton and softwood timber. The researchers say this could mean the plant is a local alternative for places that cannot grow their own cotton and timber.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Materials: Transforming succulent leaves into menstrual pad components *IMAGES & VIDEOS*  

A method for producing a highly absorbent material from sisal (Agave sisalana) — a drought-tolerant succulent plant — is described in a study published in Communications Engineering. The authors suggest that, with further development, their method could be used to produce locally sourced disposable menstrual pads in rural and semi-arid regions.

Manu Prakash and colleagues treated fibres extracted from sisal leaves with peroxyformic acid and sodium hydroxide before air drying and blending them. This generated a fluffy material which the authors suggest could be used as an absorbent layer in a disposable menstrual pad — they found that it is capable of absorbing more water than a commercially-available cotton menstrual pad (23.9 vs 15.2 grams of water per gram of material). The authors demonstrated this potential use by incorporating processed sisal into a prototype menstrual pad between a porous top layer and a waterproof bottom layer obtained from a commercial menstrual pad.

The authors estimated the raw materials and energy needed to manufacture processed sisal and compared this with previously reported data for the production of softwood timber and bleach cotton — materials that are often used in commercial menstrual pads. They estimate that manufacturing one kilogram of processed sisal in laboratory conditions generates 3.5 kilograms of carbon dioxide and consumes between 44.6 and 119.6 kilograms of water. In comparison, the manufacturing of one kilogram of processed softwood timber generates 0.5 to 1.1 kilograms of carbon dioxide and consumes 61.8 kilograms of water, while one kilogram of bleached cotton generates 1.6 to 5.3 kilograms of carbon dioxide and consumes between 64.5 and 139.5 kilograms of water.

As sisal can be harvested year round in semi-arid regions, the authors suggest that it could be used as an alternative to cotton or softwood timber to locally manufacture disposable menstrual pads in low and middle-income regions, particularly on land that is dry or often considered unsuitable for agriculture. They propose that future research could explore approaches to increase the sustainability of sisal processing by investigating whether polymer-rich liquid waste generated during fibre treatment could be used in the production of fertiliser or compostable waterproof bottom layers for menstrual pads.

Multimedia

Fluffing process following treatment with peroxyformic acid.
Single-head sisal decorticator in use.
Measurement of absorption under pressure

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Research Springer Nature, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Communications Engineering
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Stanford University, USA
Funder: Part of this work was performed at the Stanford Nano Shared Facilities (SNSF), supported by the National Science Foundation under award ECCS-2026822. The work was financially supported by grant to M.P. from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation under award UAMBN (SPO-220079). A.O. is founder of Olex TechnoEnterprises which designs and manufactures sisal decorticators. The remaining authors have no competing interests to declare.
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