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For product formulators, one of nature’s most powerful cleaning ingredients may offer a deeper, more sustainable clean.
April 1, 2022
By: Aaron Lee
Univar Solutions
What if you could develop or reformulate your cleaning product using ingredients found in nature and, in the process, make an effective household cleaner that continuously cleans using the power of biology? Though we can’t see them with the naked eye, microbes are all around us. More numerous than people, plants and insects combined, microbes are highly adaptable to the environments where they live. Already known for helping improve gut health (think probiotics in yogurt), these beneficial bacteria can also contribute to a healthy home microbiome—meaning not all bacteria are harmful in our environments. Formulators are taking notice of microbes as hero ingredients. More consumers demand more sustainable, eco-friendlier ingredients. They want fewer toxins, artificial additives and harsh chemicals in their homes and lives. These microorganisms offer a natural alternative to conventional cleaning ingredients. Beneath the Surface Microbial cleaning challenges the long-standing notion that chemicals like bleach and ammonia are the best way to fight grease and grime, remove stains and eliminate unhealthy germs. Increasing evidence suggests that cleaning with harsh chemicals and over-sanitizing might be killing off even the beneficial bacteria we need in the process of wiping out the harmful ones we don’t. “The truth is that beneficial, low-risk bacteria far outnumber their high-risk, harmful counterparts. So, wiping out all bacteria—even those that ultimately strengthen our immune systems or balance our home’s microbiome—can come at a high cost,” said Michael Furlan, a scientist studying microbial cleaning methods at Novozymes, a global biotechnology and biosolutions company using microbes and enzymes. While using microbial cleaners isn’t a new concept, biotechnology is transforming the homecare and industrial cleaning market. Novozymes has put microbes to work in industrial, commercial and municipal applications for decades. Since the company’s inception in the 1940s, Novozymes relied on microorganisms to decontaminate wastewater and bioremediation for oil spill cleanup. But newer discoveries about how and where microbes inhabit our bodies, our homes and the planet continue to drive advances, bringing new methods and technologies to older markets while raising awareness in newer markets, such as consumer product goods like surface cleaners, drain cleaners or stain removers. Biodegradable, Easy to Use Microbes can be used in cleaners across a broad range of applications and spaces, from hard surfaces like counters and floors to soft surfaces like carpet and upholstery, to laundry, drains and septic. From home and business to hospitals and hospitality, microbial cleaners have a wide appeal, wherever deep and continuous cleaning is valued. No matter the application, microbes generally work the same way, notes Furlan, who has studied microbes for more than 15 years. “When conditions are right, meaning sufficient nutrients and moisture are present, microbes germinate from their dormant spore state into their active vegetative state,” he explained. “That’s when they secrete enzymes that degrade a wide variety of organic soils and matter, from oil, grease and food particles in the kitchen to the hidden soils and stains that can be found to linger on surfaces in homes, offices, hotels or even medical and dental offices.”
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