posted on 2020-06-19, 16:06authored byTao Xu, Chuanxin Ma, Zeynep Aytac, Xiao Hu, Kee Woei Ng, Jason C. White, Philip Demokritou
One
of the challenges in agriculture consists of the inefficiencies
in agrichemical delivery and utilization. Herein, a biodegradable,
tunable, biopolymer-based nanoplatform was developed as seed coating
to enhance agrichemical delivery and seedling development. The nanofibers
are synthesized using electrospinning of biopolymer blends without
any toxic chemicals or post-treatment and enable tunable agrichemical
release by modulating the polymer composition and hydrophilicity of
nanofibers. The germination and subsequent growth of different nanofiber-coated
seeds (tomato and lettuce) as a function of agrichemical release kinetics
were investigated in greenhouse studies, in the presence or absence
of a fungal pathogen (Fusarium species). Results
from the greenhouse studies indicate the efficacy of such nanoenabled
seed coating approach due to the precise delivery of agrichemical
at the right place while utilizing a miniscule amount of agrichemical.
The various Cu-release nanofiber coatings appeared to promote seed
germination, particularly in the diseased media conditions. This more
rapid germination led to increased seedling biomass for both plants
(12–29%) in the healthy media conditions. Such seed nanocoating
approach might be used in pathogen infested soil conditions to increase
production yields. The developed nanofiber seed coating approach brings
precision to agrichemical delivery and significantly improves germination
and seedling biomass for model seeds compared to conventional film
coating approaches utilized by the industry, owing to its unique nanofibrous
structure and controlled release kinetics.