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Seawater degradation of PLA accelerated by water-soluble PVA

e-Polymers 2020 64 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dan Huang, Zhide Hu, Tianyuan Liu, Bo Lü, Zhi‐Chao Zhen, Gexia Wang, Junhui Ji

Summary

Researchers developed seawater-degradable PVA/PLA polymer blends and found that adding water-soluble polyvinyl alcohol significantly accelerated the degradation of polylactic acid in natural seawater over 180 days compared to pure PLA.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Abstract In order to promote the degradation of PLA in seawater, a series of seawater-degradable polyester blends PVA/PLA were prepared by blending biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA) with water-soluble modified polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) in this paper. ADR 4370S was introduced to bring a certain degree of improvement in compatibility of PVA/PLA blends. The results of degradation test in natural seawater for 180 days show that the weight loss of PVA/PLA blends in seawater is much higher compared with that of pure PLA. PVA can be used as an effective hydrolysis accelerator for PLA matrix, helping to significantly reduce the molecular weight of PLA. The channels caused by dissolution/swelling of PVA facilitate the entry of water and microorganisms into the materials to contact with PLA, thereby promoting the degradation process of PLA matrix itself. Thus, both dissolution/swelling of PVA and degradation of PLA occur in PVA/PLA blends, and the degree of rapid dissolution of PVA in the early stage determines the degree of degradation of PLA.

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