PROCESS AND APPARATUS FOR PRODUCING MYCELIUM BIOMATERIAL

20220361424 · 2022-11-17

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    The process for producing mycelium biomaterial provides fresh oxygen to the growing mycelium biomaterial while removing waste heat and waste carbon dioxide by forced aeration through large volumes of material. In a first phase of fungal expansion, humidified air at a programmed temperature is passed upwardly and through a fungal inoculated substrate of discrete particles to allow the fungal inoculum to expand and dominate the substrate. Nutrient is added to the inoculated mixture and a second phase of fungal expansion is performed wherein humidified air at a programmed temperature is passed upwardly and through the nutrient enriched fungal inoculated substrate to allow the fungal inoculum to bond the discrete particles into a self-supporting biocomposite.

    The process and apparatus of the invention allows for the processing of grown materials bound by mycelium at depths of greater than 6″ and particularly in the range of from 24″ to 28″.

    Claims

    1-17. (canceled)

    18. An apparatus for producing a mycelium biomaterial comprising: a blower configured to generate a steady air stream at a predetermined pressure; an intercooler configured to regulate a temperature of the air stream; a humidifying unit configured to adjust a humidity of the air stream; a vessel comprising at least one cavity configured to receive a pourable mixture of discrete particles and a fungal inoculum; and a plurality of nozzles in a base of the vessel in communication with the humidifying unit and configured to deliver the air stream therefrom upwardly through the at least one cavity of the vessel.

    19. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein each nozzle of the plurality of nozzles comprises: a cylindrical body disposed within the vessel to define an expansion chamber; a nut threaded into the cylindrical body from outside the vessel to secure the cylindrical body to the vessel; a connecting piece secured to the nut to deliver a restricted flow of air from the humidifying unit through the nut and into the expansion chamber; a mesh screen disposed on the cylindrical body over the expansion chamber; and a cylindrical cover slidably mounted over the cylindrical body and the mesh screen, wherein the cylindrical cover comprises an opening coaxial with the expansion chamber to deliver air therethrough.

    20. The apparatus of claim 18, further comprising a plurality of removable inserts within the cavity of the vessel.

    21. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein at least a portion of one nozzle of the plurality of nozzles is configured to extend from the base and into the at least one cavity.

    22. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein each of the plurality of nozzles provides an equal flow relative to each other.

    23. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein the plurality of nozzles comprises an array of nozzles.

    24. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the vessel comprises an internal void tooling geometry within the cavity configured to form a mycelium biomaterial with voids.

    25. The apparatus of claim 24, wherein the void tooling geometry comprises a plurality of upstanding posts extending into the cavity.

    26. A mycelium biomaterial produced by the apparatus of claim 25, comprising a plurality of tunnels with a cross-sectional shape corresponding to a cross-sectional shape of the posts.

    27. The apparatus of claim 18, further comprising the pourable mixture.

    28. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein a pressure drop across the plurality of nozzles is greater than a pressure drop across the pourable mixture.

    29. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the discrete particles are selected from the group consisting of wood shavings, wood chips, and wood wool.

    30. The apparatus of claim 29, wherein the wood chips comprise Aspen.

    31. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the blower, the intercooler and the humidifying unit are configured to provide the air stream at sufficient pressure to flow the air stream through the vessel and the pourable mixture.

    32. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the fungal inoculum is selected from the group consisting of Ganoderma lucidum and Trametes versicolor.

    33. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the vessel has dimensions of 40″×40″×28″.

    34. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein the vessel comprises a lid.

    35. The apparatus of claim 34, wherein the lid is permeable.

    36. A mycelium biomaterial produced by the apparatus of claim 18, wherein a growth depth of the biomaterial is greater than six inches.

    37. The mycelium biomaterial of claim 36, wherein the growth depth ranges between 24 inches to 28 inches.

    Description

    [0059] These and other objects and advantages will become more apparent from the following detailed description taken with the accompanying drawings wherein:

    [0060] FIG. 1 schematically illustrates the process steps of the invention;

    [0061] FIG. 2 graphically illustrates the parameter selection, process feedback loop and product attributes for the process of the invention;

    [0062] FIG. 3 schematically illustrates an apparatus in accordance with the invention;

    [0063] FIG. 4 illustrates a partial cross-sectional side view of a vessel employed in the apparatus of the invention;

    [0064] FIG. 5 illustrates a vessel provided with inserts in accordance with the invention;

    [0065] FIG. 6 illustrates a view of a produced mycelium biomaterial with a pair of inserts incorporated therein in accordance with the invention;

    [0066] FIG. 7 illustrates a vessel constructed with an internal geometry to make a final product with voids;

    [0067] FIG. 8 illustrates a multi-cavity block made in accordance with the process of the invention;

    [0068] FIG. 9 illustrates a layer cut from the block of FIG. 8;

    [0069] FIG. 10 illustrates a segment separated from the layer of FIG. 9;

    [0070] FIG. 11 illustrates a large block of fungal biomaterial made in accordance with the process of the invention;

    [0071] FIG. 12 illustrates a thin sheet cut from the block of FIG. 11;

    [0072] FIG. 13 illustrates a thin sheet from the block of FIG. 11 in place as a landscape mat;

    [0073] FIG. 14 illustrates a sheet from the block of FIG. 11 in place as a seat for a chair; and

    [0074] FIG. 15 illustrates a cross-sectional view of a nozzle employed in the apparatus of the invention.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION

    [0075] Referring to FIG. 1, a process for the production of fungal biomaterials includes a step of mixing inoculum, e.g. Ganoderma lucidum or trametes sp. in an amount of 1-10% by dry mass, and a substrate of discrete particles e.g. Aspen chips to form a pourable mixture. The mixture may be mixed in a continuous screw mixer or batch ribbon blender, and the Aspen chips may be exposed to sterilization e.g. atmospheric steam prior to being chilled and mixed with the inoculum.

    [0076] The process also includes a step of dispensing the mixture into one or more vessels. The vessels may be bins having dimensions of 40″×40″×28″ and are filled to a height of 24″-28″. The mixture may be compacted into a vessel as the vessel is filled.

    [0077] Thereafter, the mixtures in the vessels are subjected to a step of aeration for a time and at a temperature sufficient to allow the fungal inoculum to expand and dominate the substrate. This step provides a Phase I low nutrient growth. During this step, aeration may be low, e.g. 0.50 v/v/m, since there is little readily available nutrition and thus relatively little heat generation. During this step, the fungal portion of the mixture is able to outcompete any contaminant organisms and expand to cover and dominate the wood chip portion of the mixture. The end result of this step is that the mixture is evenly coated in the fungal tissue; however, it is still easy to break apart and remix.

    [0078] Next, the mixture is removed from the vessel(s) and mixed with added nutrients.

    [0079] The mixture with the added nutrients is then poured into a second vessel having a cavity of the final desired shape for the product. Alternatively, the mixture with the added nutrients may be poured back into the first vessel, if that vessel has a cavity of the final desired shape for the product. One advantage of using two vessels is that the vessels can be used in rotation for faster operation.

    [0080] The addition of nutrients is performed after the fungus has established dominance and is able to outcompete any potential contaminant organisms for access to the easily digestible additional nutrients.

    [0081] These nutrients are quickly converted into additional fungal tissue biomass, which binds the mixture into its final form. The mixture is then subjected to Phase II aeration, which is higher in velocity and potentially cooler to combat the additional metabolic energy generated by the added nutrients.

    [0082] During the Phase II aeration, the biomass is aerated for a time and at a temperature sufficient to allow the fungal inoculum to bond the discrete particles into a self-supporting biocomposite.

    [0083] After solidifying in its final shape, the biocomposite is either desiccated in the vessel or ejected from the vessel while still wet and then dried.

    [0084] The ejected wet biocomposite may be either dried and further processed, or further processed and then dried. Further processing may include being machined into smaller components such as 1″ panels.

    [0085] Sheets of the wet biocomposite may be further processed by either a final incubation stage at 100% humidity and 80° F. to form a layer of tissue on the cut surfaces, or by being assembled into a final shape such as a box and being incubated in the same conditions in order to grow together.

    [0086] Flexible sheets cut from a block may also be pressed into 3D contours by a heated press at 400° F. in a combination drying and forming step.

    [0087] Final drying of the biocomposite can occur at ambient temperatures over the course of a week or more, or can be expedited to as fast as 24 hours at 180° F. in a wood kiln style dryer. Blocks or panels left covered outdoors for several weeks in a climate with temperatures between 40° F. and 90° F. will continue to harden, producing an aged material.

    [0088] Referring to FIG. 2, the production of mycelium biomaterial in a static aerated vessel requires the selection of a recipe and of reactor settings. Recipe selection includes selection of substrate, organism, steam treatment parameters, inoculation %, inoculation type, moisture %, and additional nutrients. A given recipe might be aspen planer shavings, G. lucidum, with or without atmospheric steam treatment for 10 minutes, a 5% by dry mass inoculation rate, a synthetic fine inoculation type, a moisture percentage of 65%, and additional nutrients of second clear flour.

    [0089] Reactor settings include the air flow rate, the air temperature, the air relativity, and the oxygen percentage. A given recipe might be 0.5 v/v/m for phase I and 1.25 v/v/m for phase II, an air temperature of 75° F., a relative humidity of 100%, and an oxygen percentage equal to atmospheric concentrations.

    [0090] As further illustrated in FIG. 2, the recipe and reactor settings result in conditions within the vessel which can be characterized as the growth conditions. These conditions include the O.sub.2 and CO.sub.2 concentrations, the temperature, the relative humidity, the rate of evaporation of moisture, the air speed velocity, and the nutrient availability. An example is an O.sub.2 concentration greater than 5%, a temperature less than 95° F. throughout the vessel, an evaporation rate at <2% of moisture content per day, an airspeed velocity of 1.2 ft/min in phase I and 2.9 ft/min in phase II, and a recalcitrant nutrient availability in phase I and a simple starch nutrient availability in phase II.

    [0091] As further illustrated in FIG. 2, the growth conditions dictate the metabolic action which occurs in the fungal tissue. This includes the heat generation, the oxygen consumption rate, the water production rate, the cellular biomass generation rate, the specific morphological characteristics, and the competition dynamics. As an example, the metabolic action may consist of heat generation of 1 Watt per wet pound of mixture, Oxygen consumption low enough to be replaced by the fresh air stream, water production sufficient to maintain the <2% moisture content loss per day rate, cellular biomass generation rate of 1% of dry mixture weight per day, morphological characteristics for maximum strength such as a high quantity of highly cross-linked and branched cells, and a strong dominance over establishment of competitive organisms.

    [0092] As further illustrated in FIG. 2, the metabolic action at any given point in time may modify the growth conditions within the reactor, which in turn dictate the metabolic conditions. This may result in time dependent changes such as a slow increase in temperature. Reactor settings may also be modulated through time to effect results such as a slow decrease in temperature or increase in aeration.

    [0093] Lastly, as shown in FIG. 2, the final material properties are a result of the metabolic activity. These properties include the cellular biomass, the morphology, the chemical composition, secondary metabolites, and modification of substrate. An example process may result in a cellular biomass of 5% by dry mass mixture, a morphology of highly branched vegetative cells, a chemical composition favoring strong cell walls, expression of secondary metabolites for increased hydrophobicity, and modification of the chemistry of the substrate to make more accessible for animal feed.

    [0094] Referring to FIG. 3, an apparatus for the production of fungal biomaterials includes a blower 1, an intercooler 2, a manifold 3, a humidifying unit 4, a vessel 5 and a plurality of air flow nozzles 6 in the base of the vessel 5.

    [0095] The blower 1 operates to provide a steady air stream at sufficient pressure to flow through the vessel 5, even after tissue growth has occurred.

    [0096] The intercooler 2 operates to regulate the air temperature out of the blower 1 and to remove heat introduced due to compression.

    [0097] The manifold 3 operates to separate a pressurized temperature controlled airflow into multiple vessels and includes a means of regulating and measuring the flow to each vessel independently.

    [0098] The humidifying unit 4 operates as a final temperature control tank for the purpose of raising the humidity of the air stream up to full saturation as well as entraining water mist into the air stream for an additional supply of moisture to the vessel 5. A heater (not shown) is included for the purpose of replacing the heat of vaporization removed by the evaporation of water.

    [0099] The airflow nozzles 6 operate to distribute the temperature and humidity controlled air stream evenly into the vessel 5 and for the purpose of injecting the air into the growing material 7 in the vessel 5 to prevent side channeling and provide even aeration to all parts of the mixture.

    [0100] The apparatus serves to produce a finished block of grown material 8 that is ejected from the vessel 5 and subsequently sliced into panels 9. As indicated, the panels 9 may be stacked in vertically spaced apart manner for the purpose of either final curing or more efficient drying by convection.

    [0101] Referring to FIGS. 4, 5 and 6, for Phase II, the aeration vessel 5′ may be constructed with a cavity 10 of a geometry to make a final product 12, such as a chair or sofa (FIG. 6).

    [0102] In addition, the cavity 10 of the vessel 5′ may be provided with one or more inserts 11 (FIG. 5) prior to receiving the pourable mixture for Phase II so that the inserts 11 may be incorporated in the produced biomaterial product, providing additional benefit, such as wood support beams or tack strips for upholstery.

    [0103] Referring to FIG. 7 to 10, wherein like reference characters indicate like parts as above, the vessel 5′ may be constructed with an internal geometry (void tooling) to make a final product with voids, such as coolers for shipping. A single vessel 5′ may incorporate multiple products, such as 48 coolers in one vessel, which would then be cut into final parts after ejection from the vessel.

    [0104] As illustrated in FIG. 7, the vessel 5′ is provided internally with a plurality of upstanding posts 13 in order to produce a single block of grown material 8, i.e. of mycelium biomaterial, as shown in FIG. 8 with a plurality of longitudinally extending tunnels 14 corresponding in cross-sectional shape to the cross-sectional shape of the posts 13 in the vessel 5′.

    [0105] Referring to FIG. 9, the block 8 of FIG. 8 may be cut transversely into a plurality of layers 15, only one of which is illustrated. As indicated, the layer 15 contains a plurality of openings 16 corresponding to the pattern of posts 13 in the vessel 5′.

    [0106] Referring to FIG. 10, the layer 15 of FIG. 9 may be cut into individual segments 17, only one of which is shown, with a single aperture 18.

    [0107] Referring to FIGS. 11 and 12, wherein like reference characters indicate like parts as above, a block of grown material 8 may be cut into a plurality of flat sheets or panels 19, only one of which is illustrated.

    [0108] The flat panels 19 may be cut thin enough for the final product to be flexible for use in products, such as conformable landscape mats (FIG. 13) to prevent erosion and weed growth. The flat panels 19 may also be used in products, such as molded chair backs (FIG. 14) where the thin panels might be compression molded into complex three dimensional geometries.

    [0109] A plurality of flat panels 19 may also be assembled into a final shape (not shown) and finish grown to make a final product such as coolers for shipping.

    [0110] Referring to FIG. 15, each nozzle 6 is mounted in the base 20 of a vessel and includes a cylindrical body 21 disposed within the vessel to define an expansion chamber 22 and a nut 23 threaded into the cylindrical body 21 from outside the base 20 of the vessel to secure the cylindrical body 21 to the base 20. In addition, each nozzle 6 includes a connecting piece 24 secured in the nut 23 to deliver a restricted flow of air from the humidifying unit 4 (see FIG. 3) through the nut 23 and into the expansion chamber 22. The connecting piece 24 serves as a flow restriction area which provides back pressure.

    [0111] Also, a mesh screen 25 is disposed on the cylindrical body 21 over the expansion chamber 22 and a cylindrical cover 26 is slidably mounted over the cylindrical body 21 and the mesh screen 25. The cover 26 has an opening 27 coaxial with the expansion chamber 22 to deliver air therethrough.

    [0112] The cross sectional areas of the screen 25 and expansion chamber 22 are selected such that even with partial blockage due to substrate chips lying against the screen 25, the remaining cross sectional area is still greater than the cross sectional area of the flow restriction area. This minimizes flow variation between nozzles due to the random orientation of chips on the screens. Without this feature, one nozzle might be blocked by chips while another might have free flowing air. Additionally, each nozzle 5 extends into the material to decrease air channeling across the vessel wall.

    [0113] It is important to note here that if P.sub.D_S+P.sub.D_G exceeds force of gravity on the substrate, the growing material will lift, opening low resistance air-flow channels that will bypass the material and reduce aeration effectiveness. This is colloquially termed “burping” and whether it occurs in operation is a combined function of the porosity of the substrate, the density of tissue growth, the air flow rate required, and the density of substrate—which all combine to dictate the burping back pressure (P.sub.burp).

    [0114] One critical dimension is the height (h) of the vessel 5 (FIG. 3). If aeration is introduced on a single side, for example on the bottom of a rectangular open top vessel, and if the vessel is sufficiently large in the length and width dimensions that heat loss through the walls cannot be considered for the central material, then in the core it is essentially a one dimensional thermodynamic and fluid dynamic system. In such a system, with heat being generated by each successive unit layer of material, the delta between the temperature of the material at the bottom of the vessel (T.sub.bot) and at the top (T.sub.top) will be directly related to the height of the vessel.

    [0115] By the same reasoning, there will always be a temperature difference between the bottom and top of the vessel, so long as the material is generating heat and being cooled by aeration. It is important that the air flow rate, the metabolic conditions, the energy availability of the substrate, the organism selected for growth, and the height of the vessel all be selected in concert in order to provide that the delta T between top and bottom is small enough that final properties compared from the top and bottom of the material are both within desired specifications.

    [0116] The final parameter for the vessel is the top surface treatment. Aeration can be used as a means to reduce the settling of contaminant spores on the material; however, for additional exclusion of surface contamination, a lid may be desired. This lid may take the form of a physical barrier, with features allowing for escape of the aeration air, but such lids can trap condensation, heat, and moisture. As described herein use is made of a permeable top layer of material specifically selected to prohibit the growth of any contamination, such as wood ash. This allows for the free flow of aeration air without formation of condensation or trapping of hot exhaust gases. Once an inhibitory priority effect has been established, the permeable top layer may be removed.

    [0117] The vessel should be one which can be filled, moved around, and dumped. The same ventilation system may be applied to much larger lanes, as are used in commercial composting. Here, substrate is loaded in, mixed in place when needed, and might be extracted by way of a drag net conveyor, again as is used in composting.

    [0118] Lanes are vessels which are fixed construction cement structures of substantially large size. A lane would be on the order of 100-400 feet long and 6-10 feet wide vs. a 4′×4′ vessel.

    [0119] Whereas the vessels, such as a 4′×4′ vessel, are portable and can be flipped upside-down to extract the product, lanes are not movable, and finished product must be pulled out of the lane. Also, for the mixing step where added nutrients are mixed in, portable vessels are small enough that the contents can be dumped into a mixing machine, and then dispensed back into the small vessel. For lanes, the nutrients are added directly into the lane, and then a piece of mixing equipment (such as an auger on a gantry system) must mix the mixture within the lane.

    [0120] Thus, the invention provides a process and apparatus for producing mycelium biomaterials in a relatively simple manner and mycelium biomaterials that are not limited in their overall volume.

    [0121] The invention also provides a process and apparatus for growing mycelium biomaterials under non-aseptic open warehouse conditions thereby reducing the process cost and complexity of producing mycelium biomaterial.