Iowa State University researchers approached the state’s soybean association about 10 years ago hoping to find new uses for high oleic soybean oil. That’s oil produced from the seeds of soybean plants. It has lower saturated fats than regular soybean oil.
The result was a polymer — essentially a glue — made from high oleic soybean oil that could replace petroleum-based polymers that contribute to global warming.
The project is a partnership between the Iowa Soybean Association, Central Iowa Expo, Iowa State University and the Farm Progress Show. The partners held a ribbon cutting Wednesday.
Iowa Soybean Association President Robb Ewoldt said this project demonstrates another use for soybeans.
The project also keeps scraps of road out of landfills, said Iowa State University chemical and biological engineering professor Eric Cochran.
“And giving it not just a new use, but a new high value use,” Cochran said. “It’s becoming a new pavement that actually serves a purpose and prevents you from having to buy new hot mix asphalt that is oil-based, primarily.”
The Farm Progress Show is back in Boone for the first time since 2018 after being canceled in 2020 because of the pandemic. The event happens in Boone on even-numbered years and Decatur, Illinois in odd-numbers years.
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