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Degradation of Film and Rigid Bioplastics During the Thermophilic Phase and the Maturation Phase of Simulated Composting

Journal of Polymers and the Environment 2021 96 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.
Federica Ruggero, Federica Ruggero, Federica Ruggero, Federica Ruggero, Samira Benali, Federica Ruggero, Rob Onderwater, Samira Benali, Samira Benali, Rob Onderwater, Riccardo Gori, Samira Benali, Emiliano Carretti, Claudio Lubello, Ruddy Wattiez, Jean‐Marie Raquez Samira Benali, Samira Benali, Ruddy Wattiez, Emiliano Carretti, Ruddy Wattiez, Samira Benali, Samira Benali, Jean‐Marie Raquez Riccardo Gori, Stéphanie Roosa, Riccardo Gori, Emiliano Carretti, Emiliano Carretti, Samira Benali, Jean‐Marie Raquez Ruddy Wattiez, Claudio Lubello, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Samira Benali, Samira Benali, Samira Benali, Riccardo Gori, Riccardo Gori, Riccardo Gori, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Ruddy Wattiez, Claudio Lubello, Riccardo Gori, Ruddy Wattiez, Riccardo Gori, Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Jean‐Marie Raquez Claudio Lubello, Jean‐Marie Raquez Riccardo Gori, Jean‐Marie Raquez Ruddy Wattiez, Jean‐Marie Raquez

Summary

Researchers tested how well commercially certified compostable bioplastics (starch-based, PBAT, and PLA) actually degrade under realistic industrial composting conditions, finding that PLA degradation was highly sensitive to both plastic thickness and the duration of the high-temperature composting phase. The results suggest that current industrial composting timelines may be insufficient to fully break down certified compostable plastics, raising questions about real-world end-of-life claims.

Abstract The recent regulations, which impose limits on single use plastics and packaging, are encouraging the development of bioplastics market. Some bioplastics are labelled as compostable with the organic waste according to a specific certification (EN 13432), however the conditions of industrial composting plants are generally less favourable than the standard test conditions. Aiming at studying the effective degradation of marketable bioplastic products under composting, the current research stresses novel elements which can strongly influence bioplastics degradation: the simulation of industrial composting conditions and the thickness of bioplastic products, ranging between 50 and 500 µm. The research approaches these critical aspects simulating a composting test of 20 days of thermophilic phase followed by 40 days of maturation phase, on starch-based polymer Mater-Bi® (MB), polybutylene adipate terephthalate (PBAT), polylactic acid (PLA) of different thickness. Conventional low density polyethylene (LDPE) was introduced as negative control. An overall study with Fourier Transform InfraRed (FTIR), ThermoGravimetric Analysis (TGA), Gel Permeation Chromatography (GPC), Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) and visual inspections was applied. Results highlighted that MB film presented the highest degradation rate, 45 ± 4.7% in terms of weight loss. Both MB and PBAT were subjected to physico-chemical features change, while LDPE presented slight degradation signs. The most critical observations have been done for PLA, which is strongly influenced both by thickness and thermophilic phase duration, shorter than the EN 13432 conditions.

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