4.7 Article

Assessment of Toxicity and Biodegradability of Poly(vinyl alcohol)-Based Materials in Marine Water

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13213742

Keywords

poly(vinyl alcohol); glycerol; microplastics; biodegradation; toxicity; marine water

Funding

  1. RisBioPlas Project - Ministry of Science and Innovation-Spanish Agency of Research [AEI: 10.13039/501100011033]
  2. LABPLAS Project (LAnd-Based Solutions for PLAStics in the Sea - EU H2020 program) [101003954]
  3. RESPONSE Project (toward a risk-based assessment of microplastic pollution in marine ecosystems - Joint Programming Initiative, Healthy and Productive Seas and Oceans, JPI Oceans-Spanish National Research) [PCI2020-112110]
  4. Ministry of Universities of Spain (FPU grant) [FPU19/02280]

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This study assesses the impact of PVA-based polymers in marine environments, focusing on biodegradation and aquatic toxicity. Results show that the biodegradation of PVA in marine conditions is negligible without an acclimated inoculum, and slightly improves when combined with glycerol. The toxicity of pure PVA is almost negligible, but slightly increases when glycerol is added to the material.
Due to the continuous rise in conventional plastic production and the deficient management of plastic waste, industry is developing alternative plastic products made of biodegradable or biobased polymers. The challenge nowadays is to create a new product that combines the advantages of conventional plastics with environmentally friendly properties. This study focuses on the assessment of the potential impact that polyvinyl alcohol (PVA)-based polymers may have once they are released into the marine environment, in terms of biodegradation in seawater (assessed by the percentage of the Theoretical Oxygen Demand, or % ThOD, of each compound) and aquatic toxicity, according to the standard toxicity test using Paracentrotus lividus larvae. We have tested three different materials: two glycerol-containing PVA based ones, and another made from pure PVA. Biodegradation of PVA under marine conditions without an acclimated inoculum seems to be negligible, and it slightly improves when the polymer is combined with glycerol, with a 5.3 and 8.4% ThOD achieved after a period of 28 days. Toxicity of pure PVA was also negligible (< 1 toxic units, TU), but slightly increases when the material included glycerol (2.2 and 2.3 TU). These results may contribute to a better assessment of the behavior of PVA-based polymers in marine environments. Given the low biodegradation rates obtained for the tested compounds, PVA polymers still require further study in order to develop materials that are truly degradable in real marine scenarios.

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