Engineered mycelium composite construction materials from fungal biorefineries: A critical review
University of Vienna · RMIT University
Abstract
Mycelium composites are an emerging class of cheap and environmentally sustainable materials experiencing increasing research interest and commercialisation in the EU and USA for construction applications. These materials utilise natural fungal growth as a low energy bio-fabrication method to upcycle abundant agricultural by-products and wastes into more sustainable alternatives to energy intensive synthetic construction materials. Mycelium composites have customisable material properties based on their composition and manufacturing process and can replace foams, timber and plastics for applications, such as insulation, door cores, panelling, flooring, cabinetry and other furnishings. Due to their low thermal…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 176
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Materials science
- Thermal insulation
- Natural materials
- Sustainability
- Green building
- Composite material
- Construction engineering
- Architectural engineering