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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Seawater‐Degradable Polymers—Fighting the Marine Plastic Pollution

Advanced Science 2020 417 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dan Huang Carolin Völker, Ge‐Xia Wang, Ge‐Xia Wang, Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Ge‐Xia Wang, Ge‐Xia Wang, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Dan Huang Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Frederik R. Wurm, Junhui Ji, Frederik R. Wurm, Junhui Ji, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Frederik R. Wurm, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Carolin Völker, Frederik R. Wurm, Frederik R. Wurm, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Dan Huang Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Frederik R. Wurm, Dan Huang Frederik R. Wurm, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Junhui Ji, Dan Huang

Summary

This review explores the development of polymers specifically designed to degrade in seawater as a strategy to combat marine plastic pollution. Researchers highlight several promising materials that break down in ocean conditions, though they note these are best suited for applications where plastic loss to the sea is unavoidable rather than as a replacement for proper waste management.

Study Type In vivo

Polymers shape human life but they also have been identified as pollutants in the oceans due to their long lifetime and low degradability. Recently, various researchers have studied the impact of (micro)plastics on marine life, biodiversity, and potential toxicity. Even if the consequences are still heavily discussed, prevention of unnecessary waste is desired. Especially, newly designed polymers that degrade in seawater are discussed as potential alternatives to commodity polymers in certain applications. Biodegradable polymers that degrade in vivo (used for biomedical applications) or during composting often exhibit too slow degradation rates in seawater. To date, no comprehensive summary for the degradation performance of polymers in seawater has been reported, nor are the studies for seawater-degradation following uniform standards. This review summarizes concepts, mechanisms, and other factors affecting the degradation process in seawater of several biodegradable polymers or polymer blends. As most of such materials cannot degrade or degrade too slowly, strategies and innovative routes for the preparation of seawater-degradable polymers with rapid degradation in natural environments are reviewed. It is believed that this selection will help to further understand and drive the development of seawater-degradable polymers.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper