Article
?
AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button.
Tier 2
?
Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence.
Environmental Sources
Marine & Wildlife
Remediation
Sign in to save
Degradation and lifetime prediction of plastics in subsea and offshore infrastructures
The Science of The Total Environment2023
35 citations
?
Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 50
?
0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Sangwon Suh,
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Laura L. Machuca,
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Stuart Higgins,
Stuart Higgins,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Sangwon Suh,
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Sangwon Suh,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Peter J. Halley,
Sangwon Suh,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Peter J. Halley,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Ibukun Oluwoye,
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Peter J. Halley,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Stuart Higgins,
Tamara S. Galloway
Stuart Higgins,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Mariano Iannuzzi,
Tamara S. Galloway
Shuhei Tanaka,
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Tamara S. Galloway
Summary
This review examines the degradation of synthetic plastics used in subsea and offshore infrastructure, presenting a new mathematical model to predict their lifespan at various ocean depths. Researchers found that plastic degradation rates decrease significantly with water depth due to changes in temperature, light intensity, and pressure. The model suggests that deeply submerged plastics may persist for extremely long periods, with important implications for microplastic generation from offshore structures.
Engineering and civil developments have relied on synthetic polymers and plastics (including polyethylene, polypropylene, polyamide, etc.) for decades, especially where their durability protects engineering structures against corrosion and other environmental stimuli. Offshore oil and gas infrastructure and renewable energy platforms are typical examples, where these plastics (100,000 s of metric tonnes worldwide) are used primarily as functional material to protect metallic flowlines and subsea equipment against seawater corrosion. Despite this, the current literature on polymers is limited to sea-surface environments, and a model for subsea degradation of plastics is needed. In this review, we collate relevant studies on the degradation of plastics and synthetic polymers in marine environments to gain insight into the fate of these materials when left in subsea conditions. We present a new mathematical model that accounts for various physicochemical changes in the oceanic environment as a function of depth to predict the lifespan of synthetic plastics and the possible formation of plastic debris, e.g., microplastics. We found that the degradation rate of the plastics decreases significantly as a function of water depth and can be estimated quantitatively by the mathematical model that accounts for the effect (and sensitivity) of geographical location, temperature, light intensity, hydrostatic pressure, and marine sediments. For instance, it takes a subsea polyethylene coating about 800 years to degrade on ocean floor (as opposed to <400 years in shallow coastal waters), generating 1000s of particles per g of degradation under certain conditions. Our results demonstrate how suspended sediments in the water column are likely to compensate for the decreasing depth-corrected degradation rates, resulting in surface abrasion and the formation of plastic debris such as microplastics. This review, and the complementing data, will be significant for the environmental impact assessment of plastics in subsea infrastructures. Moreover, as these infrastructures reach the end of their service life, the management of the plastic components becomes of great interest to environmental regulators, industry, and the community, considering the known sizeable impacts of plastics on global biogeochemical cycles.