Recycling old mattresses into building insulation using fungi

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC
Young man choosing new orthopedic mattress in store, closeup By New Africa
Young man choosing new orthopedic mattress in store, closeup By New Africa

Swinburne researchers have turned old, unwanted mattresses into safe and sustainable building insulation materials using fungi.

News release

From: Swinburne University of Technology

Old mattresses could be recycled into building insulation using fungi, Swinburne team finds

Swinburne researchers have turned old, unwanted mattresses into safe and sustainable building insulation materials using fungi.

With their findings published in Nature’s Scientific Reports Journal, the team grew a common fungus together with shredded mattress foam to create a new material that is solid and lightweight.

Mattresses are one of the hardest household items to recycle, explains Swinburne authors Dr The Hong Phong (Peter) Nguyen, Associate Professor Mostafa Nikzad and Dr Huseyin Sumer.

“Mattresses are durable, bulky, and often end up in landfill,” says Swinburne engineering expert, Dr The Hong Phong (Peter) Nguyen.

“Through natural biological processes, we can give this waste a second life.”

The process involves fungal roots binding to the waste, forming natural mineral compounds that can resist extreme heat, remaining stable even when exposed to temperatures close to 1,000 °C.

“The material performed well as an insulator, with heat-blocking ability very close to commercial insulation products already used in homes and buildings,” says Dr Nguyen.

“The approach is both practical and environmentally responsible, using fungus that is closely related to strains used in food production and medicine, and relying on common, widely used chemicals.”

1.8 million mattresses are disposed of each year in Australia, according to Director of Innovation at the Australian Bedding Stewardship Council, Tracey Pryor, who co-funded this research.

“740,000 mattresses are still sent to landfill, equating to approximately 22,000 tonnes of needless waste that can take up to 120 years each to decompose,” Pryor says.

Dr Nguyen hopes that with further development, this fungus-based material could also be used as fire-resistant insulation, building panels, or even shaped for future construction methods such as 3D-printed building elements.

“Our work shows how combining biology with waste materials, while leveraging deep manufacturing science, can lead to smart, low-impact solutions that better the environment and the lives of everyone.”

Journal/
conference:
Scientific Reports
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Swinburne University of Technology
Funder: This work received funding from a seed grant provided by the Innovative Planet Research Institute of Swinburne University of Technology and the Australian Bedding Stewardship Council.
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