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Enhanced degradation of polylactic acid microplastics in acidic soils: Does the application of biochar matter?

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 27 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Xiaoyan Zou, Kaibo Cao, Qiang Wang, Qiang Wang, Shilei Kang, Yin Wang

Summary

Researchers studied how adding biochar to acidic soil affects the breakdown of polylactic acid microplastics over one year. They found that both chicken manure and wood waste biochars accelerated the degradation of the biodegradable microplastics by altering soil chemistry and microbial activity. The findings suggest that biochar could be a useful tool for speeding up the decomposition of biodegradable plastic residues in agricultural soils.

Polymers

Biodegradable plastics, as an alternative to petroleum plastics, are fiercely increasing, but their incomplete degradation under natural conditions may lead to the breakdown into microplastics (MPs). Here, we explored the impacts of chicken manure-derived (MBC) and wood waste-derived biochar (WBC) on the degradation of polylactic acid microplastics (PLA-MPs) during soil incubation for one year. Both biochars induced more pronounced degradation characteristics in PLA-MPs, including enhanced surface roughness, the proportion of MPs < 100 µm by 12.89 %-25.67 %, oxygen loading and O/C ratio to 71.74 %-75.87 % and 1.70-1.76, as well as accelerated carbon loss and the cleavage of ester group and C-C bond. Also, biochar increased soil pH, depleted inorganic nitrogen and available phosphorus, and changed enzymic activity in PLA-MP-polluted soils. We proposed that both biochars accelerated the PLA-MP degradation by inducing alkaline, aminolysis/ammonolysis, oxidative, and microbial degradation. Among these, MBC induced aminolysis/ammonolysis by NH via Fedriven NO/NO reduction and microbial nitrogen fixation, and oxidative degradation by radicals generated through Fenton/Fenton-like reaction. WBC caused aminolysis/ammonolysis and oxidative degradation mainly through dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium and surface free radicals on biochar. These findings indicate that biochar has the potential to accelerate PLA-MP degradation, and its regulatory mechanism depends on the type of biochar.

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