Rise of the Bioplastics

tertiary-article-Bioplastics

By Lisa Jancarik

Roughly 330 million tons of plastic are produced annually, accounting for eight percent of the world’s petroleum consumption, and up to 14 million tons entered the world’s oceans in 2010. Plastic easily enters waterways as trash, and it has the added problem of fragmenting into smaller pieces that become impossible to collect. Plus, plastic tends to absorb other pollutants already present nearby. These bits of plastic enter the food chain when consumed by animals like birds and fish. The health impact on people who consume these animals is unclear.

Competing with the Dinosaurs

Despite growing public sensitivity to petroleum-based plastics in the environment, bioplastics haven’t become entirely viable replacements for their conventional counterparts, which have had a 60-year head start on their plant-based competitors. Consequently, those plastics have a range of attractive properties and are inexpensive to produce. For bioplastics to be competitive, the price of a barrel of oil would need to almost triple.

New Bioplastics Developments

One type of bioplastic already in limited use is polylactic acid (PLA). Among other uses, PLA is one of the few materials suitable for 3D printing, and its biocompatibility makes it a good choice for medical products like absorbable sutures. To this point, PLA has not seen broader use because its production is expensive compared to that of petroleum-based material. Plus, the intermediary steps of the current synthesis create waste and require the use of metals. At Belgian University KU Leuven, researchers may have found a way around these problems by using a zeolite – a porous mineral that catalyzes synthesis in a way that skips the intermediary steps and does not require metals. If success in the lab scales to the industrial level, then PLA synthesis will become more cost-effective and environmentally friendly.

While KU Leuven works toward improving PLA synthesis, another institute is focusing on degrading plastics for recycling. Researchers at North Dakota State University’s Center for Sustainable Materials Science recently exposed a solution containing fructose-based plastic to 350nm-wavelength light. Three hours of light exposure degraded this simple plastic to its building blocks. The light degradation approach suggests a faster, more environmentally friendly means to recycle and reuse polymer building blocks. In coming years, the group expects to examine how the process might work with plastics used in consumer goods, like cars and electronics.

Familiar Brands and Bioplastics

One iconic brand is already using bioplastics in its single-use products. Coca-Cola Company launched PlantBottle in 2009, and since that time has produced 35 million of these drink bottles. PlantBottle consists of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and up to 30 percent bio-based material. While PET is recyclable, the company's latest bottle material, unveiled in the summer of 2015, is entirely bio-based.

Where durability is the desired trait, the search for bioplastic alternatives continues. Toymaker Lego announced in 2012 that it intended to find sustainable materials for its iconic bricks, currently made from ABS. The brand's reputation for durability makes finding a replacement material tricky. There are other challenges, too. For example, brick colors need to match because play sets get mixed together. Plus, the Lego elements have to click together firmly, but pull apart with a child’s arm strength. Within the plastics world, Lego’s mission constitutes big news, as the company operates over 5,000 molds on more than 1,000 injection molding machines. In 2014, Lego produced over 60 million pieces for its building sets.

With major players like Lego and Coca-Cola looking at plastics alternatives, bioplastics are closing the gap on that 60-year head start held by their petroleum-based counterparts.