-
factors are more variable. For example, a
material may have
tested as
biodegrading at a high rate in the lab may not
degrade at a high rate in a landfill...
- non-fossil-fuel or non-polluting alternative.
Plastics biodegrade over a long
period of time, and may not
biodegrade fully (so that they are
absorbed into the ecosystemic)...
- also in detergents.
Laboratory tests have
indicated that it does
readily biodegrade.
Cetrimonium bromide – a C19
structural analogue Cetrimonium chloride...
- be able to
biodegrade malachite green, azo dyes, triphenylmethane, as well as some
other industrial dyes. Due to its
ability to
biodegrade these dyes...
-
environmental concern over
metallised Mylar balloons, as they do not
biodegrade or
shred as
rubber balloons do.
Release of
these types of
balloons into...
- non-biodegradable
according to
American and
European standards because it does not
biodegrade outside of
artificial composting conditions (see § Compostable plastics)...
-
delivery research to
slowly release a compound. The
polymer does not
biodegrade within the body, but is
quite inert and
causes little or no
reaction following...
- compound;
however the
linear compound biodegrades far more quickly,
making it the
safer choice over time. It is
biodegraded rapidly under aerobic conditions...
- published.
Wikinews has
related news:
Polyurethane plastic substitute can
biodegrade in seawater, say
scientists Polyurethanes,
especially those made using...
-
conventional plastics containing additives are able to
biodegrade.
Bioplastics are able to
biodegrade in
different environments hence they are more acceptable...