Method of Forming a Mycological Product
20220396052 · 2022-12-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B32B5/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/31504
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T428/1348
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C12N11/14
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T428/249921
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B32B5/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The method grows a mycelial mass over a three-dimensional lattice such that a dense network of oriented hyphae is formed on the lattice. Growth along the lattice results in mycelium composite with highly organized hyphae strands and allows the design and production of composites with greater strength in chosen directions due to the organized nature of the supporting mycelia structure.
Claims
1. A method of making a mycological product comprising the steps of providing a three-dimensional framework; and growing mycelium on said framework in an environment held at a temperature and humidity to stimulate mycelia growth for a time sufficient for the mycelia growth to form a dense network of oriented hyphae on said framework.
2. A method as set forth in claim 1 wherein said framework is digestible.
3. A method as set forth in claim 1 which further comprises the step of coating said framework with a mixture of starch and water prior to said step of growing mycelium on said framework.
4. A method as set forth in claim 3 which further comprises the step of placing the coated framework on a bed of inoculum containing Plearotus ostreatus on a nutrient carrier prior to said step of growing mycelium on said framework.
5. A method of forming a product comprising providing a three-dimensional lattice having at least two grids oriented orthogonally to each other; coating the lattice with a mixture of starch and water; thereafter placing the lattice in a bed of inoculum containing Plearotus ostreatus in a nutrient carrier; thereafter stimulating mycelium growth over and through said grids of the lattice to produce a dense network of hyphae; and allowing said hyphae to interweave over time to produce a mat of said thickly formed mycelia on said lattice.
6. A method as set forth in claim 5 further comprising the step of drying said mat.
Description
[0014] These and other objects and advantages will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings wherein:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Referring to
[0030] The inoculum is produced using any one of the many methods known for the cultivation and production of fungi including, but not limited to, liquid suspended fragmented mycelia, liquid suspended spores and mycelia growing on solid or liquid nutrient.
[0031] Inoculum is combined with the engineered substrate, which may be comprised of nutritional and non-nutritional particles, fibers, or other elements. This mixture of inoculum and substrate is then placed in an enclosure.
[0032] In step 3, hyphae are grown through the substrate, with the net shape of the substrate bounded by the physical dimensions of the enclosure. This enclosure can take on any range of shapes including rectangles, boxes, spheres, and any other combinations of surfaces that produce a volume. Growth can occur both inside the enclosure and outside of the enclosure depending on desired end shape. Similarly, multiple enclosures can be combined and nested to produce voids in the final substrate. Other elements embedded with the slurry may also become integrated into the final composite through the growth of the hyphae.
[0033] The hyphae digest the nutrients and form a network of interconnected mycelia cells growing through and around the nutrients and through and around the non-nutrient particles, fibers, or elements. This growth provides structure to the once loose particles, fibers, elements, and nutrients, effectively bonding them in place while bonding the hyphae to each other as well.
[0034] In step 4, the substrate, now held tightly together by the mycelia network, is separated from the enclosure, and any internal enclosures or elements are separated away, as desired.
[0035] The above method may be performed with a filamentous fungus selected from the group consisting of ascomycetes, basidiomycetes, deuteromycetes, oomycetes, and zygomycetes. The method is preferably performed with fungi selected from the class: Holobasidiomycete.
[0036] The method is more preferably performed with a fungus selected from the group consisting of: [0037] pleurotus ostreatus [0038] Agrocybe brasiliensis [0039] Flammulina velutipes [0040] Hypholoma capnoides [0041] Hypholoma sublaterium [0042] Morchella angusticeps [0043] Macrolepiota procera [0044] Coprinus comatus [0045] Agaricus arvensis [0046] Ganoderma tsugae [0047] Inonotus obliquus
[0048] The method allows for the production of materials that may, in various embodiments, be characterized as structural, acoustical, insulating, shock absorbing, fire protecting, biodegrading, flexible, rigid, water absorbing, and water resisting and which may have other properties in varying degrees based on the selection of fungi and the nutrients. By varying the nutrient size, shape, and type, the bonded bulking particle, object, or fiber, size, shape, and type, the environmental conditions, and the fungi strain, a diverse range of material types, characteristics and appearances can be produced using the method described above.
[0049] The present invention uses the vegetative growth cycle of filamentous fungi for the production of materials comprised entirely, or partially of the cellular body of said fungi collectively known as mycelia.
[0050]
[0051] In this Description, the following definitions are specifically used:
[0052] Spore: The haploid, asexual bud or sexual reproducing unit, or “seed”, of a fungus.
[0053] Hyphae: The thread-like, cellular tube of filamentous fungi which emerge and grow from the germination of a fungal spore.
[0054] Mycelium: The collection of hyphae tubes originating from a single spore and branching out into the environment.
[0055] Inoculum: Any carrier, solid, aerated, or liquid, of a organism, which can be used to transfer said organism to another media, medium, or substrate.
[0056] Nutrient: Any complex carbohydrate, polysaccharide chain, or fatty group, that a filamentous fungi can utilize as an energy source for growth.
[0057] Fruiting Body: A multicellular structure comprised of fungi hyphae that is formed for the purpose of spore production, generally referred to as a mushroom.
Fungi Culturing for Material Production
Methodology
[0058] Procedures for culturing filamentous fungi for material production.
[0059] All methods disclosed for the production of grown materials require an inoculation stage wherein an inoculum is used to transport a organism into a engineered substrate. The inoculum, carrying a desired fungi strain, is produced in sufficient quantities to inoculate the volume of the engineered substrates; inoculation volume may range from as low as 1% of the substrates total volume to as high as 80% of the substrates volume. Inoculum may take the form of a liquid carrier, solid carrier, or any other known method for transporting a organism from one growth supporting environment to another.
[0060] Generally, the inoculum is comprised of water, carbohydrates, sugars, vitamins, other nutrients and the fungi. Depending on temperature, initial tissue amounts, humidity, inoculum constituent concentrations, and growth periods, culturing methodology could vary widely.
Grown Material within an Enclosure
[0061]
[0062] In this embodiment, a group of nutritional particles 1 and a group of insulating particles 2 were placed in an enclosure 5 to form an engineered substrate 6 therein. The enclosure 5 has an open top and determines the final net shape of the grown composite. Thereafter, an inoculum 3 was applied directly to the surface of the engineered substrate 6.
[0063] Shortly after the inoculum 3 was applied to the surface, hyphae 4 were visible extending away from the inoculum 3 and into and around the nutritional particles 1 and insulating particles 2.
[0064]
[0065]
[0066]
Static Embodiment—Composite
[0067]
[0076] These materials were combined together in a dry mix process using a rotary mixer to fully incorporate the particles, nutrients, and fibers. Water was added in the final mixing stage. Total mixing time was 5 minutes.
[0077] The enclosures were incubated for 14 days at 100% RH humidity and at a temperature of 75° Fahrenheit. The enclosures serve as individual microclimates for each growing substrate set. By controlling the rate of gas exchange, humidity can be varied between RH 100%, inside an enclosure, and the exterior humidity, typically RH 30-50%. Each rectangular enclosure fully contained the substrate and inoculum preventing gaseous exchange. Opening the enclosures lids after 5 and 10 days allowed gaseous exchange. In some cases, lids included filter disks allowing continuous gas exchange.
[0078] After 14 days of growth, the enclosures were removed from the incubator. The loose fill particles and fibers having been bonded into a cohesive whole by the fungi's mycelium produced a rectangular panel with dimensions closely matching those of the growth enclosure. This panel was then removed from the enclosure by removing the lid, inverting the growth enclosure, and pressing gently on the bottom.
[0079] The mycelia bonded panel was then transferred to a drying rack within a convection oven. Air was circulated around the panel until fully dry, about 4 hours. Air temperature was held at 130 degrees Fahrenheit.
[0080] After drying, the now completed composite is suitable for direct application within a wall, or can be post processed to include other features or additions including water resistant skins, stiff exterior panel faces, and paper facings.
[0081] Within the above embodiment, the ratios and percentages of bulking particles, insulating particles, fibers, nutrients, inoculum, and water can be varied to produce composites with a range of properties. The materials expanded perlite compositions can vary from 5%-95% of the composite by volume. Other particles, including exfoliated vermiculite, diatomic earth, and ground plastics, can be combined with the perlite or substituted entirely. Particle sizes, from horticultural grade perlite to filter grade perlite are all suitable for composite composition and many different composite types can be created by varying the ratio of perlite particle size or vermiculite or diatomic earth particle size.
[0082] Rice hulls can compose anywhere from 5-95% of the composite material by volume. Fibers can compose from 1-90% of the material by volume. DGS can compose between 2-30% of the substrate by volume. The inoculum, when in the form of grain, can compose between 1-70% of the substrate by volume. The inoculum, when in other forms can comprise up to 100% of the substrate. Ground cellulose, sourced from waste paper, can compose from 1-30% of the substrate by volume.
[0083] Other embodiments may use an entirely different set of particles from either agricultural or industrial sources in ratios sufficient to support the growing of filamentous fungi through their mass.
[0084] Though not detailed in this embodiment, the engineered substrate can also contain elements and features including: rods, cubes, panels, lattices, and other elements with a minimum dimension 2 times larger than the mean diameter of the largest average particle size.
[0085] In this embodiment, the fungi strain Pleurotus ostreatus was grown through the substrate to produce a bonded composite. Many other filamentous fungi's could be used to produce a similar bonding result with differing final composite strength, flexibility, and water sorption characteristics.
[0086] In this embodiment, the substrate was inoculated using Pleurotus ostreatus growing on rye grain. Other methods of inoculation, including liquid spore inoculation, and liquid tissue inoculation, could be used with a similar result.
[0087] Incubation of the composite was performed at 100% RH humidity at 75° Fahrenheit. Successful incubation can be performed at temperatures as low as 35° Fahrenheit and as high as 130° Fahrenheit. RH humidity can also be varied to as low as 40%.
[0088] Drying was accomplished using a convection oven but other methods, including microwaving and exposing the composite to a stream of cool, dry air, are both viable approaches to moisture removal.
Structure or lattice for mycelium growth—
[0089] Mycelia based composites may be grown without the explicit use of a loose fill particle substrate. In fact, by creating a highly organized growth substrate, formations of mycelia composites can be created that might not normally arise when growth is allowed to propagate naturally through loose particles.
[0090] One way of adding an engineered structure to mycelium composites is to produce a digestible or non-digestible 3-d framework within which the mycelium grows. This framework may be formed from the group including: starch, plastic, wood, or fibers. This framework may be oriented orthogonally or oriented in other ways to produce mycelia growth primarily along the axis's of the grid. Additionally, this grid may be flexible or rigid. Spacing between grid members can range from 0.1 mm to upwards of 10 cm.
[0091] Growth along these engineered grids or lattices results in mycelium composites with highly organized hyphae strands allowing the design and production of composites with greater strength in chosen directions due to the organized nature of the supporting mycelia structure.
[0092] Such an arrangement also allows the development of organized mycelium structures composed primarily of hyphae rather than of bulking and nutritional particles.
[0093] To produce one embodiment of such a structure the following steps are taken:
[0094] Referring to
[0095] This lattice is placed on/in a bed of inoculum containing Plearotus ostreatus on a suitable nutrient carrier. The lattice and inoculum bed are then placed in an environment held at the correct temperature, between 55-95 degrees Fahrenheit, and humidity, between 75% RH and 100% RH, to stimulate mycelia growth.
[0096]
[0097] The mycelium is grown over and through the grid producing a dense network of oriented hyphae. Overtime, the hyphae will interweave producing a dense 3-D mat. After 1 to 2 weeks of growth, the grid is removed from the incubator and dried, using either a convection oven, or other means to remove the water from the mycelium mass. Once dried the mycelia composite can be directly used, or post processed for other applications.
[0098] Within this embodiment, the grid may or not provide the mycelia a nutrient source, but if nutrients are not provided within the grid framework, the grid must be placed in close proximity to an inoculum containing a nutrient source as to allow the fungi to transport nutrients into the grid based mycelium for further cellular expansion.
[0099] The invention thus provides a new method of producing grown materials. These materials may be flexible, rigid, structural, biodegradable, insulating, shock absorbent, hydrophobic, hydrophilic, non-flammable, an air barrier, breathable, acoustically absorbent and the like. All of the embodiments of this invention can have their material characteristics modified by varying the organism strain, nutrient source, and other particles, fibers, elements, or other items, included in the growth process.
[0100] Further, the invention provides a method of making a mycological material that can be used for various purposes, such as, for food production.