| Literature DB >> 30340360 |
Vincent Verney1, Audrey Ramoné2, Florence Delor-Jestin3, Sophie Commereuc4, Marek Koutny5, Geoffrey Perchet6, Julien Troquet7.
Abstract
This study is devoted to the degradation pathway (bio, photo degradation and photo/bio) of Poly(Lactic acid) PLA polymers by means of melt viscoelasticity. A comparison was made between three PLA polymers with different microstructures (L, D stereoisomers). Biodegradability was determined during composting by burying the polymer films in compost at 58 °C. Melt viscoelasticity was used to assess the molecular evolution of the materials during the composting process. Viscoelastic data were plotted in the complex plane. We used this methodology to check the kinetics of the molecular weight decrease during the initial stages of the degradation, through the evolution of Newtonian viscosity. After a few days in compost, the Newtonian viscosity decreased sharply, meaning that macromolecular chain scissions began at the beginning of the experiments. However, a double molar mass distribution was also observed on Cole⁻Cole plots, indicating that there is also a chain recombination mechanism competing with the chain scission mechanism. PLA hydrolysis was observed by infra-red spectroscopy, where acid characteristic peaks appeared and became more intense during experiments, confirming hydrolytic activity during the first step of biodegradation. During UV ageing, polymer materials undergo a deep molecular evolution. After photo-degradation, lower viscosities were measured during biodegradation, but no significant differences in composting were found.Entities:
Keywords: PLA; biodegradation; photo-degradation; rheology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30340360 PMCID: PMC6222331 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23102682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Polymers physical characteristics.
| References | PLA 4042D | PLLA | PDLA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mw (g·mol−1) | 209,000 | 138,000 | 149,000 |
| Polydispersity | 1, 8 | 1, 7 | 1, 7 |
| Tg | 59 °C | 59 °C | 59 °C |
| Tm | 150 °C | 180 °C | 178 °C |
| Tc | - | 100 °C | 108 °C |
Scheme 1Complex plane representation: Cole–Cole plots.
Visual evolution of cellulose and polymer fragments.
| Composting Time (Days) | Cellulose | PLLA | PDLA |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 |
|
|
|
| 13 |
|
|
|
| 40 |
|
|
|
| 50 | Absence of cellulose fragments |
|
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Figure 1Cole–Cole plot of aged and non-aged PLA4042D.
Figure 2Cole–Cole plots of PLLA, PDLA and PLA4042D during composting (0 to 46 days). Viscoelastic experiments were performed at T = 180 °C.
Figure 3Zero shear viscosity evolution during composting of PLLA, PDLA and PLA4042D.
Figure 4Cole–Cole plots of PLLA, PDLA and PLA4042D non-aged and photo-aged during composting (0 until to 7 days). Unfilled symbols: after 100 h of photo-ageing; filled symbols non-aged. Viscoelastic experiments have been performed at T = 180 °C.
Figure 5Variation of the Newtonian viscosity versus time of composting for PLA 4042D, 100 h UV aged and non-aged.
Figure 6FTIR spectra of PLLA films during composting (0 until to 28 days) in the region of 4000−400 cm−1.
Scheme 2Mechanism of PLA hydrolysis.
Figure 7FTIR spectra of PLA films before and after 25 days of biodegradation in the region of 1000−600 cm−1.
Figure 8A921/A956 evolution during composting (0 until to 45 days).