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Recyclability Studies on Poly(lactic acid)/Poly(butylene succinate‐<i>co</i>‐adipate) (PLA/PBSA) Biobased and Biodegradable Films

Maria‐Beatrice Coltelli, Laura Aliotta, Gianluca Fasano, Filip Miketa, Filip Brkić, Rafael Alonso, Marco Romei, Patrizia Cinelli, Ilaria Canesi, Vito Gigante, Andrea Lazzeri

2023Macromolecular Materials and Engineering15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Poly(lactic acid)/poly(butylene succinate‐ co ‐adipate) (PLA/PBSA) blends are found promising for film packaging applications because of their flexibility, resistance, and compostability. Industrially extruded granules and films based on PLA and containing different amounts of PBSA are reprocessed through mini‐extrusion, to simulate recycling, and tested in terms of their melt flow rate as a function of PBSA content. Moreover, pure PLA commercial granules and the film produced extruding the PLA/PBSA 60/40 blend are reprocessed several times by injection molding and characterized in terms of melt flow rate, mechanical properties, thermal properties, and color as a function of injection molding cycles. The variation in melt fluidity and thermo‐mechanical properties is negligible up to 3 injection molding cycles for both pure PLA granules and PLA/PBSA blend. In the case of blend the change in color (yellowing and darkening) is more evident and slight local compositional change in injection molded items can be evidenced as well as a slight decrease in PBS crystallinity as a function of injection molding cycles. Nevertheless, in applications where these aspects are not critical, these materials can be recycled by extrusion or injection molding before being composted, thus prolonging their life cycle and storing carbon in them as longer as possible.

Topics & Concepts

AdipateMaterials scienceExtrusionPolybutylene succinateMolding (decorative)Lactic acidCrystallinityMelt flow indexComposite materialPolylactic acidRheologyChemical engineeringPolymerGeneticsEngineeringBacteriaCopolymerBiologybiodegradable polymer synthesis and propertiesCarbon dioxide utilization in catalysisAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies
Recyclability Studies on Poly(lactic acid)/Poly(butylene succinate‐<i>co</i>‐adipate) (PLA/PBSA) Biobased and Biodegradable Films | Litcius