Golf Tees
By some estimates, U.S. golfers use 2 billion tees each year. Tees made from bioprocessed cornstarch biodegrade in soil faster than wood or plastic.
The term bioproducts designates a wide variety of innovative corn-based products made from natural raw materials. These products are used in food as well as in a variety of industrial and consumer products available today, often as a petroleum substitute.
For many decades, fermentation of corn-derived glucose has provided a multitude of bioproducts, including organic acids, amino acids, vitamins, and food gums.
Thanks to decades of work by scientists and researchers in our industry, the contents of a simple kernel of corn are the basis for a thousand everyday products, such as pharmaceutical casings, paper goods, and automobile tires.
Corn-based polymers, sometimes known as biopolymers, create high-performance, affordable, and durable every-day products. Biodegradable, yet sturdy, caps, cups, paper coatings, fabrics, carpeting, and a host of other products are all possible today because of corn-based biopolymers. And with technological improvements in fermentation, they are moving into the next generation of technology: Utilized in 3-D printing inks and studied by nanotechnology scientists as a method for delivering cancer treatments.
By some estimates, U.S. golfers use 2 billion tees each year. Tees made from bioprocessed cornstarch biodegrade in soil faster than wood or plastic.
Due to the unique size, shape and structure of the corn protein zein at the nanoparticle level, scientists are studying how it can deliver drugs that fight cancer.
Microorganisms that create antibodies are often fed corn-based glucose in the lab. Corn is responsible for more than 85 antibiotics, including penicillin.