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The degradation of single-use plastics and commercially viable bioplastics in the environment: A review

Environmental Research 2023 89 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tan Suet May Amelia, Tan Suet May Amelia, Siti Norliyana Idris, Siti Norliyana Idris, Tan Suet May Amelia, Tan Suet May Amelia, Seeram Ramakrishna Tan Suet May Amelia, Kesaven Bhubalan, Kesaven Bhubalan, Seeram Ramakrishna Amirul Al‐Ashraf Abdullah, Anim Maisara Mohd Lazim, Seeram Ramakrishna Kesaven Bhubalan, Anim Maisara Mohd Lazim, Seeram Ramakrishna Kesaven Bhubalan, Kesaven Bhubalan, Nurul Aliah Mohd Ahmad Zakwan, Seeram Ramakrishna Seeram Ramakrishna Nurul Aliah Mohd Ahmad Zakwan, Muhammad Imran Jamaluddin, Seeram Ramakrishna Seeram Ramakrishna Sevakumaran Vigneswari, Kesaven Bhubalan, Seeram Ramakrishna Muhammad Imran Jamaluddin, Seeram Ramakrishna Ramesh Kumar Santhanam, Kesaven Bhubalan, Sevakumaran Vigneswari, Amirul Al‐Ashraf Abdullah, Sevakumaran Vigneswari, Kesaven Bhubalan, Seeram Ramakrishna Kesaven Bhubalan, Seeram Ramakrishna

Summary

Researchers reviewed how conventional single-use plastics degrade over decades in natural environments versus how bioplastics biodegrade, finding that while alternatives like PBS and PHA show genuine biodegradation potential, most require specific industrial composting conditions that are rarely available in practice.

Plastics have become an integral part of human life. Single-use plastics (SUPs) are disposable plastics designed to be used once then promptly discarded or recycled. This SUPs range from packaging and takeaway containers to disposable razors and hotel toiletries. Synthetic plastics, which are made of non-renewable petroleum and natural gas resources, require decades to perpetually disintegrate in nature thus contribute to plastic pollution worldwide, especially in marine environments. In response to these problems, bioplastics or bio-based and biodegradable polymers from renewable sources has been considered as an alternative. Understanding the mechanisms behind the degradation of conventional SUPs and biodegradability of their greener counterpart, bioplastics, is crucial for appropriate material selection in the future. This review aims to provide insights into the degradation or disintegration of conventional single-use plastics and the biodegradability of the different types of greener-counterparts, bioplastics, their mechanisms, and conditions. This review highlights on the biodegradation in the environments including composting systems. Here, the various types of alternative biodegradable polymers, such as bacterially biosynthesised bioplastics, natural fibre-reinforced plastics, starch-, cellulose-, lignin-, and soy-based polymers were explored. Review of past literature revealed that although bioplastics are relatively eco-friendly, their natural compositions and properties are inconsistent. Furthermore, the global plastic market for biodegradable plastics remains relatively small and require further research and commercialization efforts, especially considering the urgency of plastic and microplastic pollution as currently critical global issue. Biodegradable plastics have potential to replace conventional plastics as they show biodegradation ability under real environments, and thus intensive research on the various biodegradable plastics is needed to inform stakeholders and policy makers on the appropriate response to the gradually emerging biodegradable plastics.

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