Assessment of Environmental Biodegradation of Synthetic Polymers

1994 Journal of macromolecular science. Part C, Reviews in macromolecular chemistry and physics/Journal of macromolecular science. Reviews in macromolecular chemistry and physics 170 citations

Abstract

Abstract The large-scale commercial use of synthetic polymers and their disposal in the environment is a phenomenon less than half a century old, a duration which is minuscule in the evolutionary time scale required for microbial evolution on earth. Consequently, unlike their naturally-occurring counterparts, the biopolymers, which enjoyed long-term interactions with the microbial biosphere, synthetic polymers never had the opportunity to serve as a source of a microbial nutrient of any significance. Hence, few, if any, of the microorganisms are biochemically equipped to catabolize synthetic macromolecules. This lack of development of metabolic pathways capable of utilizing synthetic polymers is often cited as the main reason for recalcitrance of synthetic polymers in the environment [1]. The term "recalcitrant" is used here to describe organic compounds that persist for extended periods of time in the environment, but not necessarily as a result of microbial fallibility.

Keywords

PolymerBiosphereBiochemical engineeringBiodegradationSynthetic biologySynthetic polymerMicroorganismScale (ratio)Microbial population biologyEnvironmental scienceChemistryEcologyBacteriaBiologyOrganic chemistryComputational biologyEngineering

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Publication Info

Year
1994
Type
article
Volume
34
Issue
1
Pages
25-76
Citations
170
Access
Closed

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Anthony L. Andrady (1994). Assessment of Environmental Biodegradation of Synthetic Polymers. Journal of macromolecular science. Part C, Reviews in macromolecular chemistry and physics/Journal of macromolecular science. Reviews in macromolecular chemistry and physics , 34 (1) , 25-76. https://doi.org/10.1080/15321799408009632

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DOI
10.1080/15321799408009632