1. Thermoplastic starch (TPS) bioplastic, the green solution for single-use petroleum plastic food packaging – A review.
- Author
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Rahardiyan, Dino, Moko, Emma Mauren, Tan, Joo Shun, and Lee, Chee Keong
- Subjects
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BIODEGRADABLE plastics , *FOOD packaging , *PLASTICS in packaging , *STARCH , *PETROLEUM , *PLASTIC scrap , *SINGLE-use plastics - Abstract
Plastic throughout the years is now one of the biggest world commodities and also the largest pollution to have an environmental impact, accumulating in landfills and also leaching into water systems and oceans. Especially with the shift to single-use disposable plastic, evermore positions plastics as the number one novel entity that pollutes the earth. This shift is also consistent in the food packaging industry. Managing plastic waste is still an issue at large, while the process of pyrolysis incineration still requires an obscene amount of energy that also does not resolve the problems with its environmental impact, the cost of mechanical-chemical degradation even outweighs the cost of producing the materials, and biodegradation process is a very slow and long process. Converting to bioplastics is one of the potential solutions to the global plastic issue. This review covers the potentials, limitations, challenges, progress and advancements of bioplastics, especially thermoplastic starch (starch-based bioplastic) in their efforts to replace petroleum plastics in food packaging and smart food packaging, especially for single-use (disposable) food packaging. • Petroleum plastic is one of the world's biggest industries but contributes to the largest pollution of the environment. • Plastic waste management by pyrolysis incineration brings negative impacts to the environment with its carbon emissions. • Processing plastic wastes chemically and mechanically is also very inefficient and costs even more than producing plastic. • One of the potential solutions to issues of petroleum plastic is to convert it to bioplastics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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