Know the bacteria that may end with plastic pollution

in #science8 years ago (edited)

Would you believe me if I tell you bacteria could save earth's health? Let's see

Bacteria are wonderful microorganisms that inhabit various environments such as the ocean, land and even our bodies. They are the most abundant organisms on earth and some withstand extreme conditions adapting to the medium in which they find themselves. I bet you know some of them cause disease and are infectious, but did you know that some species can produce plastic? That's right, I'm pleased to introduce you the polyhydroxyalkanoates.

Wait... poly what?

Polymers are macromolecules formed by a repetitive chain of smaller compounds (monomers). These are the raw material of plastic products we use everyday and most of the ones used in the industry are petroleum derivatives. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) are polymers in development that have an special characteristic; they grow inside some bacteria. The most used one in the industry due to its high production rate of the polymer is Ralstonia eutropha.

This bacteria feed on organic material and synthesizes PHA as reserve of energy, in case the condition of the environment change and need to be fed. Thus, this mechanism of adaptation to non-nutritive media enables the polymer extraction from the bacteria, dried up and used as a raw material. (The white spots in the image below are the PHA accumulated)


Electron microscopic image of Ralstonia eutropha containing PHA (image credit)

Why polymers synthesized by bacteria?

  • They are Biodegradable and biocompatible.
  • They can be applied in biomedicine, food, packaging and textiles
  • Unlike other biodegradable polymers, such as starch based, PHA avoid the use of food for plastic production since bacteria can eat organic waste to produce the polymer.
  • They have similar structures and properties than the ones massively used today (petroleum based).

Even so, there's a lot of work to do

Still, PHA are not massively used in the industrial procedures nowadays due to its costs. Petroleum based polymers are too much cheaper than the PHAs, that's why to develop them industrially is necessary to achieve more economic conditions of growing for bacteria, to implement not expensive "food" for them and to design better industrial procedures, among others.

In the meantime...


(image credit)
I know it sounds like hippie environmentalist speech, but just try do not use plastics that don't be necessary. The importance with this isn't exactly the environmental impact, but the enculturation of the proper use of available resources.

Why do I write this? Plastics traumatize me

I am traumatized by the daily use of plastics. One of the reasons why I chose my career (I study Chemical Engineering, read the story here) was my concern about the future of the environment. There is so much to do in the world! so I decided I want to participate in new proposals aimed to fix environmental problems that are becoming in today challenges for all people working on them.


This is me ALWAYS jajaja (image credit)

Bibliographical sources:

Bioplastics magazine
Article
College Magazine

P.D. A bacteria joke you may like :)


IN A SUPPORT GROUP FOR MICROBES AND BACTERIA
"...my whole family died because of alcohol."

Comment if you want to know more or just to let me know your opinion. Thank you!

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This was a well written post, I can't believe it was completely ignored.

I appreciate your comment, Thank you very much! :)

Keep making cool posts about stuff you know! I will follow you so I can read your future stuff!

Interesting post, surfed over here from the academic Spotlight efforts from coinbitgold.

Did i understand it correctly, PHA is manufactured inside the bacteria inself, and doesn't goes through any conventional polymerisation process using C2 as a base monomer? If so, then the bottleneck is still economies of scale... a conventional large scale PE gas phase reactor have a reactor throughput of 40 tons/hr....

To be commercially feasible, i suppose the fermentation process have to be faster than 40tons/hr before it can compete with the conventional material. Keep up the positive efforts, and looking forward to breakthroughs !

Yes, you understood me :). Actually the process is scalable to industry, the thing is that it is not economically profitable due to the substrates costs and the procedures of extraction of PHA from bacteria.
Thanks for your comment!

Interesting! I know PHA is also used in making biodegradable plastics and bags :-) are you on steemit.chat?
Would like to contact you.

Yes! due to its properties it's more used as raw material for plastic bags. I am on Steemit.chat :)

Plastics are choking the land. This news gives us all hope for the planet. we do try to avoid plastic by using cloth bags and the like.

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