In-Soil Degradation of Polymer Materials Waste – A Survey of Different Approaches in Relation with Environmental Impact

Authors

  • Carmen-Alice Teaca Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry
  • Maurusa-Elena Ignat Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry
  • Marioara Nechifor Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry
  • Fulga Tanasa Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry
  • Leonard Ignat Petru Poni Institute of Macromolecular Chemistry

Keywords:

Wastes, Wood fibers, Plant fibers, Polymers, Wood-polymer composites, Plant fibers-polymer composites, Degradation, Environmental impact, Evaluation of degradation

Abstract

Vegetal fibers from different sources, including wood fibers and plant-derived fibers, together with polymer plastics per se (natural, synthetic, and their blends), as well as their combinations as composite materials may generate significant amounts of wastes. These will undergo degradation process under exposure to different environmental factors including microorganisms, climatic changes – e.g. droughts, oxygen, temperature, soil dynamics, UV radiation, etc. This survey offers a concise review of degradation under environmental conditions, mainly after in-soil exposure, of waste made of polymer materials and natural fibers. It also describes the most common methods for evaluation of bioconversion and degradation, as well as the structural properties after degradation (e.g. macroscopic investigation; weight loss; spectrometry – UV, FTIR, NMR; X-ray diffraction for crystalline changes; SEM microscopy; and thermal stability).

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Published

2022-11-18 — Updated on 2023-01-31

Issue

Section

Scholarly Review