Preparation, characterization and field test of biodegradable sodium alginate based spray mulching coatings
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2009
abstract:
An innovative biodegradable coating that can be sprayed was developed and tested as
suitable alternative to low density polyethylene (LDPE) films for soil mulching in horticulture.
A mulch was created by spraying onto the soil a sodium alginate water-based
solution that, at the end of the cultivation cycle, could be tilled into the soil to be biodegraded.
The mechanical and radiometric properties, the functionality of the spray
coating, and its biodegradation were assessed by means of laboratory measurements and
cultivation field tests. In the field, during the cultivation of strawberries, the spray coating
was compared with a LDPE mulching film and a straw mulch. The mechanical properties of
the coating degraded when exposed in the field, but the coating kept its mulching effect for
6 months. The radiometric properties varied without regular trends, but the coating
maintained its capacity to suppress weeds. The biodegradation tests showed that the spray
coating samples biodegraded by 65% after 6 months into the soil.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
AGRICULTURAL APPLICATIONS; RADIOMETRIC PROPERTIES; PROTECTED CULTIVATION; MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES; PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; PLASTIC FILMS; STARCH
List of contributors:
Santagata, Gabriella; Immirzi, Barbara
Published in: