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Degradation Characteristics of Reed-Based PBAT Mulch and Their Effects on Plant Growth and Soil Properties

Materials 2025 Score: 38 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yiyun Zhu, Yipeng Wang, Qiuxia Zhang, Yuan Huang, Jia Chu Xu, Jixing Xie

Summary

Researchers prepared PBAT and PBAT/reed fibre composite mulch films and characterised their degradation behaviour and effects on soil properties and soybean growth. The PBAT/reed fibre film achieved 90.43% biodegradation in 91 days under composting conditions and 89% under field conditions, but incorporation of 5% PBAT/RF fragments into soil reduced pH by 5.1%, decreased sucrase and catalase activities, and reduced soybean leaf chlorophyll content by 7.2%, indicating growth inhibition despite the composite's faster biodegradation rate.

Polymers

Poly (butylene adipate-co-terephthalate) (PBAT) and PBAT/reed fiber (RF) mulch films were prepared. The molecular structural changes and surface morphological evolution during the degradation process were systematically characterized using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The prepared PBAT/RF mulch film biodegradation rate reached 90.43% within 91 days under controlled composting conditions, which was 9.52% higher than a pure PBAT mulch film. The effects of adding PBAT and PBAT/RF microplastics on soil properties and soybean physiological indicators were dynamic. The study demonstrated that the incorporation of 5% PBAT/RF mulch film fragments into soil led to a 5.1% reduction in soil pH and a 17.2% increase in soluble organic carbon content. While the effects of 5% PBAT/RF on soil urease and neutral phosphatase activities were non-significant, sucrase activity decreased by 7.4% and catalase activity was reduced to 0.38 U/g. Additionally, the addition of 5% PBAT/RF resulted in a soybean germination rate of 93.74%, which was 4.0% higher than that observed in the group treated with 5% PBAT alone. The experimental data revealed a 7.2% reduction in leaf chlorophyll content, with concomitant growth inhibition in the soybean seedlings. The study demonstrated that the PBAT/RF composite film achieved 89% biodegradation within 180 days under field conditions, effectively mitigating post-application effects on agroecosystems compared to conventional polyethylene mulch.

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