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Biorefining of Thermoplastic Starch via Depolymerization and Methane Arrested Anaerobic Digestion

ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Weishen Zeng, Kasper D. de Leeuw, David P. B. T. B. Strik

Summary

This study explored whether biodegradable thermoplastic starch packaging could be broken down into useful chemicals through a combination of heat treatment and anaerobic digestion. Higher temperatures accelerated breakdown but also produced microplastics, as the material contains PBAT and PLA plastic co-polymers. The work highlights a tension in biodegradable plastic design: materials marketed as eco-friendly can still generate microplastic fragments and resist full biological conversion without specialized industrial processing.

Polymers

In the circular plastics economy, biodegradable plastic waste streams become a resource to be recycled with thoughtful integration of physiochemical and microbial processes. Anaerobic digestion as well as the carboxylate platform provide opportunities to convert complex biomass, including biodegradable plastic waste. Here, we study how a commercial thermoplastic starch (TPS) product, which typically displays poor digestibility into biogas, can be biorefined into various chemicals. First, abiotic depolymerization was studied under mesophilic (35 °C) and thermophilic conditions (55 and 70 °C) over 56 days. The results showed accelerated hydrolysis and microplastic formation at higher temperatures, impacting the TPS morphology and disintegration process. TPS material characterization revealed the presence of PBAT (polybutylene adipate-co-terephthalate) and PLA (polylactic acid) as copolymers. The highest hydrolysis efficiency was 36.3%, with glucose, lactic acid (LA), terephthalic acid (TPA), adipic acid (AA), and 1,4-butanediol (1,4-BDO) identified. Besides abiotic treatment, methane-arrested anaerobic digestion of solid TPS and/or hydrolysates was studied within 14 days. Hereby, up to 23.1% of the provided materials was converted into volatile fatty acids. Consumption of glucose and lactate suggests that anaerobic biological conversion including microbial chain elongation occurred, while 1,4-BDO, AA, and TPA were unconverted. With these findings, a biorefinery concept was developed to recover chemicals from TPS-containing waste streams.

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