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Evaluation of the rate of abiotic and biotic degradation of oxo-degradable polyethylene
Affiliation:1. Institute of Technology “Prof. Jorge A. Sabato”, Av.Gral Paz 1499, B1650, San Martin, Argentina;2. School of Science and Technology, National University of San Martin, Av. 25 de Mayo and Francia, B1650, San Martín, Argentina;3. National Scientific and Technical Research Council, Av. Rivadavia 1917, 1033 Buenos Aires, Argentina;1. Department of Chemical Engineering, Thapar Institute of Engineering & Technology, (Deemed to be University), Bhadson Road, Patiala, 147004, Punjab, India;2. Department of Chemical Engineering, Sant Longowal Institute of Engineering and Technology, Deemed to Be University Under MHRD, Govt of India, Longowal, 148106, Punjab, India;1. Department of Applied Botany, Mangalore University, Mangalagangothri, 574199, Mangalore, Karnataka, India;2. Centre for Application of Radioisotopes and RadiationTechnology (CARRT), Mangalore University, Mangalagangothri, 574199, Karnataka, India;1. College of Environmental Science and Engineering, State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, PR China;2. Shanghai Institute of Pollution Control and Ecological Security, Shanghai 200092, PR China;1. Biology Department, College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, P. O. Box: 36, PC 123, Al Khoud, Sultanate of Oman;2. Department of Marine Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kuwait University, P.O. Box 5969, Safat, Kuwait;3. Chemistry Department, College of Science, Sultan Qaboos University, P. O. Box: 36, PC 123, Al Khoud, Sultanate of Oman;4. Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Kuwait University, P.O. Box 5969, Safat, Kuwait
Abstract:The recent introduction of oxo-degradable additive in the Argentinean market has motivated the study of the effect of abiotic (temperature and ultraviolet (UV) radiation) and biotic (aerobic in compost) degradation on the structure and mechanical behavior of films of polyethylene (PE) and oxo-degradable polyethylene (PE+AD).Physico-chemical tests show that the failure strain and the carbonyl index of degraded PE and PE+AD samples depend on the UV irradiation dose. Furthermore, the additive plays a crucial role in the degradation and subsequent decay of the molecular weight.It was observed that, for the same dose, the most deteriorated material was the one exposed to the lowest irradiance, emphasizing the importance of the time of exposure to UV radiation. The ratio between the irradiance and the critical dose, is a characteristic time associated to the sharp decay on the failure strain. The critical dose decreases significantly when increasing the temperature of the photo-degradation assay.PE is more susceptible to thermal degradation than PE+AD; the latter only degrades under thermal aging at the highest temperature.Initially biotic degradation in compost showed an increasing production of carbon dioxide for both previously UV-degraded and untreated PE+AD. It is also remarkable that UV-degraded samples of PE and PE+AD with differences in their abiotic degradation level, reached the same final biotic degradation level. It was observed that although the additive increased the abiotic photodegradation, the molecular weight reduction in compost was not enough to reach the maximum biotic degradation level established by international standards for biodegradable materials.
Keywords:Polyethylene  Oxo-degradable  Photodegradation  Tensile test  Biodegradation
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