Abstract

Plastic waste (microplastics) is one of the primary sources of environmental pollutants, serving as a reservoir for them. In this study, previously isolated and screened polymer-degrading bacteria (B. subtilis V8, P. aminophilusB1 4-, P. putida C 2 5, P. aeruginosa V1, and A. calcoaceticus V4) were utilised to examine the biodegradation of LDPE (low-density polyethylene) microplastics. Response surface methodology (RSM) was used to optimize the physicochemical growth parameters (pH, temperature, and ammonium sulphate concentration). By using the polyphasic approach, including CO2 estimation, weight loss analysis, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy, and electrical conductivities examine the plastic biodegradability. After four months, all biodegradable plastic samples were evaluated. When compared to the other tested cultures, P. aeruginosa V1 showed the most significant degradation (CO2evolution of 8.86 g.l-l and percentage weight loss of 18.21 %) with increased electrical conductivity, followed by B. subtilis V8 (CO2 evolution of 8.10 g.l-l and percentage weight loss of 16.12 %), A. calcoaceticus V4 (CO2 evolution of 7.21 g.l-l and percentage weight loss of 15.44 %), P. putida C 2-5 (CO2 evolution of 5.76 g.l-l and percentage weight loss of 13.30 %), and P. aminophilus B1 4- (CO2 evolution of 5.62 g.l-l and percentage weight loss of 11.72 %). The deteriorated materials' exterior modifications (surface alteration) were also examined using SEM analysis, and the chemical bonding alterations (bond vibration-bending) were determined using FT-IR spectroscopy.

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