0
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. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Gut & Microbiome Remediation Sign in to save

Chemical-Physical Characterization of Bio-Based Biodegradable Plastics in View of Identifying Suitable Recycling/Recovery Strategies and Numerical Modeling of PLA Pyrolysis

Waste and Biomass Valorization 2023 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
F Lombardi, Lorenzo Bartolucci, Stefano Cordiner, Giulia Costa, Alessia Falsetti, Pauline M. Mele, Mariano Mercurio, Vincenzo Mulone, Davide Sorino

Summary

Researchers characterized several bio-based and biodegradable polymer alternatives to conventional plastics using chemical-physical methods, assessing their suitability for industrial composting and identifying challenges in managing these bioplastics in the existing waste stream.

Polymers

Abstract Several bio-based and biodegradable polymers have been lately introduced on the market as potential substitutes for conventional plastics in order to decrease the environmental impacts related to plastics manufacturing and especially end of life disposal. The most applied route for the management of these types of bioplastics once they enter the waste stream is co-treatment with biowaste in anaerobic digestion and/or composting plants that may lead to their recycling as digestate and/or compost. Several studies however, have reported the incomplete biodegradation of these materials at lab-scale and/or in conventional treatment plants and the significant content of small inert particles, including microplastics, in the final products. This could represent an obstacle to the agricultural use of the produced digestate and/or compost. It is therefore necessary to study all the possible options for the recycling of these types of materials based on the specific characteristics of the polymers that constitute them. In this study, four different types of bio-based biodegradable plastics were characterized by chemical-physical analysis. In particular, the main properties investigated included the content of volatile and non-volatile phases, crystallinity, main elemental composition, content of different phases by spectroscopic investigation using Fourier Transform InfraRed spectra and of metals and metalloids of potential environmental concern. The results of the thermogravimetry analysis indicated that all of the recycling/recovery options considered (compost production via biodegradation, chemical recycling and energy recovery) could be potentially applicable for the examined bioplastics, since they showed to contain polymers that volatilize below 550 °C. The highest volatile matter contents were measured for PLA cups and starch-based films, while the highest ash contents were found for the other two types of rigid bioplastics, which also showed the highest concentrations of elements of potential environmental concern, that were anyhow quite limited, and reduced higher heating values estimated by elemental analysis compared to PLA or starch-based films. In addition, the rigid bioplastics tested exhibited a higher degree of crystallinity, which could be associated to a lower biodegradability. With regard to chemical recycling processes, the results of the chemical-physical investigations indicated that pyrolysis could be a technically viable process to apply for the treatment of all of the bioplastic samples examined. Thus, PLA, which is manufactured through lactic acid condensation, chemical recycling by rapid depolymerization through pyrolysis was evaluated applying a numerical model implemented in Aspen plus®. Results indicated that the best yields in terms of lactide recovery could be obtained at an temperature of 400 °C and 10 s residence time and that other valuable products may be obtained potentially by fractional condensation. Graphical Abstract

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

An exploration of future of bioplastics and their physical, chemical and biological characteristic through bibliometric Analysis

This review explored the future of bioplastics as alternatives to petroleum-based plastics, examining their physical, chemical, and biological characteristics and comparing degradation behavior in different environments. The paper assessed current limitations in bioplastic performance and biodegradability that must be addressed before they can effectively replace conventional plastics at scale.

Article Tier 2

Bio-based plastics in a circular economy: A review of recovery pathways and implications for product design

Researchers reviewed how bio-based plastics — made from renewable plant sources — can be recovered and recycled at end-of-life, finding that the feasibility of eight different recovery methods depends heavily not just on plastic chemistry but on how products are designed, and offering guidance for designers to improve recyclability.

Article Tier 2

Performance Spectrum of Home-Compostable Biopolymer Fibers Compared to a Petrochemical Alternative

Researchers compared home-compostable biopolymer fibers to conventional petrochemical alternatives, evaluating their mechanical performance and degradability to assess whether biobased materials can serve as viable substitutes that reduce microplastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

Bioplastics: A new analytical challenge

This review examines the environmental properties and degradation behavior of bioplastics such as PLA and PHAs, evaluating whether they represent a genuinely sustainable alternative to petroleum-based plastics and assessing the analytical techniques available to detect and quantify their breakdown products.

Article Tier 2

Biotechnological Aspects and Mathematical Modeling of the Biodegradation of Plastics under Controlled Conditions

Mathematical models of plastic biodegradation kinetics under controlled conditions were reviewed and evaluated for their ability to capture the complex interplay of biological, physical, and chemical processes involved in plastic breakdown. The review identifies key modeling challenges and argues that better kinetic frameworks are needed to predict real-world plastic degradation rates and inform waste management strategies.

Share this paper