| Literature DB >> 34065779 |
Jet Yin Boey1, Lydia Mohamad1, Yong Sen Khok1, Guan Seng Tay1, Siti Baidurah1.
Abstract
Overconsumption of plastic goods and improper handling of petroleum-derived plastic waste have brought a plethora of negative impacts to the environment, ecosystem and human health due to its recalcitrance to degradation. These drawbacks become the main driving force behind finding biopolymers with the degradable properties. With the advancement in biopolymer research, polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) and poly(lacyic acid) (PLA) and its composites have been alluded to as a potential alternative to replace the petrochemical counterpart. This review highlights the current synthesis process and application of PHAs and PLA and its composites for food packaging materials and coatings. These biopolymers can be further ameliorated to enhance their applicability and are discussed by including the current commercially available packaging products. Factors influencing biodegradation are outlined in the latter part of this review. The main aim of this review article is to organize the scattered available information on various aspects of PHAs and PLA, and its composites for packaging application purposes. It is evident from a literature survey of about 140 recently published papers from the past 15 years that PLA and PHA show excellent physical properties as potential food packaging materials.Entities:
Keywords: PHA-based composites; PLA-based composites; biodegradation; poly(lactic acid); polyhydroxyalkanoates
Year: 2021 PMID: 34065779 PMCID: PMC8150976 DOI: 10.3390/polym13101544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Condition of conventional polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) extraction methods.
| No. | Isolation Method | Strain | Condition of Extraction | Disadvantages | Purity (%) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Solvent extraction |
| Chloroform, ratio of cells to chloroform of 1 g:100 mL, stirring for five days |
Consumption of large volume of toxic and volatile solvents Not environmentally friendly High capital and operation cost Difficulty in extracting PHA from solution containing more than 5% ( Native order of polymer chains in PHA granules might be disrupted Lengthy process Low recovery | 95 | [ |
| 2. | Chemical digestion | Recombinant | Sodium hypochlorite, |
Low purity of PHA Large volume of wastewater Treatment needed to remove surfactant from wastewater Severe degradation of the polymer | 93 | [ |
| 3. | Supercritical fluid disruption |
| Supercritical CO2, |
Dependent on process parameters Frequent need for clean up Difficulties in extracting polar analytes Difficulties in dealing with natural samples Low recovery | 89 | [ |
| 4. | Enzymatic treatment |
|
High cost of enzymes Complex process | 94 | [ | |
| 5. | Bead mill disruption |
| Bead diameter of 512 µm, bead loading of 85%, 2800 rpm |
Require several passes Long processing time Various process parameters have to be controlled precisely | - | [ |
| 6. | Flotation techniques |
| Chloroform, 30 °C, |
Consumption of large volume of toxic and volatile solvents | 98 | [ |
| 7. | Gamma irradiation |
| Radiation doses of |
Length of irradiation time High initial investment cost | - | [ |
| 8. | Aqueous two-phase system |
| Polyethylene glycol [PEG] 8000/phosphate, pH 8.0 and 28 °C, 30 min |
Dependent on process parameters Issue of robustness and reproducibility Absence of commercial kits to evaluate aqueous two-phase system at bench scale Poor understanding of the mechanism | 95 | [ |
Summarization of PHA-based materials.
| No. | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Vials, bottles, and containers. |
Biodegradable in both marine water and soil. | High production costs | [ |
| 2 | Disposable items and household goods: utensils, hygiene products and compostable bags |
Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 3 | PHAs microspheres in cosmetics and body washes |
Replacement for the conventional non-biodegradable micro-beads. Biodegradability of the PHAs microsphere reduces the microplastic pollution. | High production costs | [ |
| 4 | Food packaging |
Good barrier properties toward oxygen, carbon dioxide and moisture. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 5 | Food packaging |
PHB lamellar structure contribute to the superior gas barriers properties with vapor permeability approximately 560 g µm/m2/day. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 6 | Mulch films |
Maintain good soil structure, moisture retention and weed control. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 7 | Mulch films |
Maintain good soil structure, moisture retention and weed control. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 8 | Modified fishing gear |
Biodegradable in an aquatic environment. | Expensive | [ |
| 9 | Microencapsulated urea and slow-release fertilizer |
Non-toxic. Biodegradable. Control the timing and manner of the fertilizer delivery. | High production costs | [ |
| 10 | Pesticide and herbicide |
Improve the pesticidal and herbicidal action. Reduce the environmental toxicity. | High production costs | [ |
| 11 | Food packaging |
Non-toxic. Biodegradable. Useful water vapour barrier properties. Improvement in terms of crystallization behaviour, thermal stability and mechanical properties. | Slightly lowered production costs. | [ |
| 12 | Paperboard of food packaging (PHAs) |
Non-toxic. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
| 13 | Drinking straw |
Non-toxic. Biodegradable. | High production costs | [ |
Summarization of PLA-based materials.
| No. | Application | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Food packaging |
Improvement in oxygen transmission rate |
Less improvement in elongation at break | [ |
| 2 | Food packaging |
Improvement in the oxygen barrier properties | - | [ |
| 3 | Active packaging |
Biodegradable Good tensile strength Improved oxygen permeabilities Better preservative effects |
High water vapour permeability | [ |
| 4 | Food packaging |
Biodegradable High barrier properties towards oxygen permeation Overall migration levels are below the migration limits for food contact materials | - | [ |
| 5 | Food packaging |
Improvement in the water vapour rate and oxygen permeabilities | - | [ |
| 6 | Food packaging |
Biodegradable High barrier properties towards oxygen permeation Overall migration levels are below the migration limits for food contact materials | - | [ |
| 7 | Green packaging |
Improved interfacial interactions Ductile Improvement in mechanical properties | - | [ |
| 8 | Food packaging |
Homogeneous morphology Improvement in mechanical properties |
Phase separation was observed with the plasticizer concentration of 20 wt% | [ |
| 9 | Antibacterial food packaging |
Reduction of both microorganisms ( Good barrier layer against water vapour transmittance |
Reduction in elongation at break values | [ |
| 11 | Agricultural film |
Highly transparent Good light transmittance Ductile | - | [ |
| 12 | Food packaging and containers |
Overall migration levels are below the migration limits for food contact materials | - | [ |