Abstract

The present study dealt with the five marine microalgae strains viz., Chloroidium saccharophilum, Picochlorum maculatum, Amphora sp., Hymenomonas globosa and Limnospira indica and their effective degradation ability of Low-Density Polyethylene for the period of 45 days. The incubation of LDPE in microalgae culture has resulted in the maximum weight loss (20.16 ± 0.14 %), higher reduction rate (0.005/day) and lower half-life (138.4 days) in the LDPE treated with P. maculatum. The SEM images of all treated LDPE revealed surface erosion and the ATR-FTIR spectra showed functional group peaks along with new peaks at 1369.35 cm−1, 2332.96 cm−1 and 500–726 cm−1. Carbonyl (Keto, Ester), Vinyl and Internal double bond indices increased significantly in all the treated groups. The crystallinity was decreased (64.13 %) in P. maculatum treated LDPE than the control (71.37 %). Thermogravimetric analysis showed the reduction in thermal stability after biodegradation. This efficient microalgal degradation as a bioremediation technique will reduce the plastic pollution.

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