Authors
Berit Gewert, Merle M Plassmann, Matthew MacLeod
Publication date
2015
Source
Environmental science: processes & impacts
Volume
17
Issue
9
Pages
1513-1521
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Description
Each year vast amounts of plastic are produced worldwide. When released to the environment, plastics accumulate, and plastic debris in the world's oceans is of particular environmental concern. More than 60% of all floating debris in the oceans is plastic and amounts are increasing each year. Plastic polymers in the marine environment are exposed to sunlight, oxidants and physical stress, and over time they weather and degrade. The degradation processes and products must be understood to detect and evaluate potential environmental hazards. Some attention has been drawn to additives and persistent organic pollutants that sorb to the plastic surface, but so far the chemicals generated by degradation of the plastic polymers themselves have not been well studied from an environmental perspective. In this paper we review available information about the degradation pathways and chemicals that are formed by …
Total citations
201620172018201920202021202220232024124274108225297425403229
Scholar articles
B Gewert, MM Plassmann, M MacLeod - Environmental science: processes & impacts, 2015