Environmental Sciences, asked by niharikasingh1285, 4 days ago

why polythene is non biodegradable​

Answers

Answered by rajesh848910
0

Answer:

Most plastics in use today are made of polyethylene terephthalate, or PET for short, and are nearly indestructible. It is nearly impossible to decompose PET plastics because most bacteria cannot break them down. UV light from the sun can break plastic down, but it takes a long time

Explanation:

Answered by itxhorror
0

Most plastic is composed of polymers derived from ancient vegetation which become exceptionally long molecules when heated in the manufacturing process, producing a product that is unnatural.

Explanation:

Plastic is made from petroleum, a product of oil, using heat and a catalyst to change the propylene into polypropylene, a substance not found in nature. PET is a polyester. Since these are unnatural products, not found in nature, there are no organisms capable of decomposing the material, so it will not degrade as does other plant and animal waste.

Plastics present many problems beside being non-biodegradable. These include: they are flammable, pollute the environment at a staggering rate, and cannot be safely burned. Plastics are killing wildlife when they are mistaken for food, and stick in the body until the bird or animal dies of starvation.

There are some plastics that are processed to avoid the strong carbon bonds formed in the heating process, but they will not last as long as the mainstream plastics, and will start to break down much sooner.

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