Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Bio-Polymers
- A plastic material produced from biomass sources. Plastics can be
produced from starch and cellulose, but also polylactic acid and
biomass-derived ethylene, can achieve improved performance
and/or durability.
- Starch
- Low cost
- Use surplus
agricultural produce
- Compatible with
thermal processing
- Limited strength (blended
with non-bio polymer)
- Cellulose
- Most abundant
natural polymer
- Not water
soluble
- Used in a wide range of
applications: Paper, film,
cellophane
- Advantages
- Biodegradable
- Low environmental
impact
- Bio-compatable
- Consumes less
energy to
produce
- Renewable
- Compatible with other
ecosystems (ocean)
- Less waste
going to landfill
- Use less C02
to extract
- Feedstock-
renewable
- Energy recovery from
ethanol used within
production
- Disadvantages
- Biodegradable
- Poor physical and
technical problems
- No recycling routes
for bio-polymers
- People are unsure of how
to deal with the waste
- Contaminating of plastic
recycling systems
- Rely on environmental factors
- Technology is needed to
stabilize production -
greenhouses for when there
is a wet period (stabilize
prices)
- Ethical drawback
(food-fuel)
- 10x cost of
conventional
plastics
- Greenhouse Gases other than CO2
released into the atmosphere
during production and after use.
Methane released in landfill
- Difficult to separate from
plastics waste
- Lack of industrial
composting
infrastructure
- Degredation of biopolymers may be more
of a problem than the polymers themselves
- Makes materials physically and
chemically smaller but not
disappear
- Speed of degredation is important: too fast and
the polymer is useless, too slow and the waste
remains for long periods