
‘Trametes versicolor’, a wood-rotting fungus known as turkey tail, grows through waste OSB, converting it into a bio-based composite material for insulation.
Photo Credit: Tessa Hennis
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Fungi-Based Bio-Composite Insulation
The Core Concept: Mycelium from the Trametes versicolor (turkey tail) fungus is used to break down hard-to-recycle engineered wood waste, transforming it into a sustainable, fire-resistant, and thermally insulating bio-composite material.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike traditional petrochemical insulation or other bio-composites that rely on agricultural crops, this process utilizes fungi to actively degrade oriented strand board (OSB) containing synthetic resins, using the growing mycelium network as a natural binding agent to construct the new material.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Trametes versicolor: A resilient, wood-rotting fungus capable of breaking down complex organic materials and synthetic additives in engineered wood.
- Mycelium Network: Root-like fungal threads that absorb nutrients and act as a biological glue to bind the wood flakes.
- Oriented Strand Board (OSB): The primary waste substrate, composed of compressed wood flakes bonded with synthetic resins.
- Low-Carbon Production Model: A manufacturing process yielding a more than ten-fold reduction in carbon emissions compared to conventional materials like extruded polystyrene or mineral wool.
_MoreDetail-v3_x2_1272x960.png)





.png)






