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 Remediation Sign in to save

Challenges with Verifying Microbial Degradation of Polyethylene

Polymers 2020 354 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.
Zahra Montazer, M B Habibi Najafi, David B. Levin

Summary

This critical review examines published claims of microbial polyethylene degradation, finding that while surface colonization and minor chemical changes have been demonstrated, complete biodegradation of polyethylene under ambient conditions remains unproven and methodological rigor is often lacking.

Polymers

Polyethylene (PE) is the most abundant synthetic, petroleum-based plastic materials produced globally, and one of the most resistant to biodegradation, resulting in massive accumulation in the environment. Although the microbial degradation of polyethylene has been reported, complete biodegradation of polyethylene has not been achieved, and rapid degradation of polyethylene under ambient conditions in the environment is still not feasible. Experiments reported in the literature suffer from a number of limitations, and conclusive evidence for the complete biodegradation of polyethylene by microorganisms has been elusive. These limitations include the lack of a working definition for the biodegradation of polyethylene that can lead to testable hypotheses, a non-uniform description of experimental conditions used, and variations in the type(s) of polyethylene used, leading to a profound limitation in our understanding of the processes and mechanisms involved in the microbial degradation of polyethylene. The objective of this review is to outline the challenges in polyethylene degradation experiments and clarify the parameters required to achieve polyethylene biodegradation. This review emphasizes the necessity of developing a biochemically-based definition for the biodegradation of polyethylene (and other synthetic plastics) to simplify the comparison of results of experiments focused for the microbial degradation of polyethylene.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Biodegradation of polyethylene: a brief review

This review examines research on biodegradation of polyethylene by microorganisms, summarizing the physico-chemical changes observed and noting that while promising bacterial strains have been identified, complete biodegradation under ambient conditions has not been achieved.

Article Tier 2

Microbial abilities to degrade global environmental plastic polymer waste are overstated

This critical review examines claims of microbial plastic degradation in the scientific literature, arguing that many announcements of novel plastic-degrading microorganisms overstate the extent and rate of actual polymer breakdown. The authors call for standardized verification methods to distinguish genuine biodegradation from superficial surface weathering in studies of plastic-degrading microbes.

Article Tier 2

Recent progresses and perspectives of polyethylene biodegradation by bacteria and fungi: A review

This review examines the current state of polyethylene biodegradation by bacteria and fungi, one of the most widely used and difficult-to-degrade plastics. Researchers found that factors such as surface hydrophobicity, physical pretreatment, and environmental conditions significantly influence microbial degradation rates, with biodegradation involving biofilm formation, fragmentation, and eventual mineralization.

Article Tier 2

A Foundation for Advancing Studies of the Biodegradation of Polyethylene Surrogates by Environmental and Model Laboratory Microbes.

Researchers established a foundation for studying polyethylene biodegradation by surveying microbes capable of degrading branched or linear waxy hydrocarbon surrogates, finding that the degree of branching significantly influences degradability and identifying key environmental and laboratory microbes for further study.

Article Tier 2

Biodegradation of Polymers: Stages, Measurement, Standards and Prospects

This review covers all stages of polymer biodegradation, from initial surface colonization by microbes to complete breakdown into CO2 and water. The authors compare testing standards across different environments like soil, marine, and compost settings, noting significant gaps between lab results and real-world degradation rates. Understanding true biodegradability is critical because many products marketed as biodegradable may still leave behind persistent microplastic fragments.

Share this paper