gcsescience.com                                                          73                                                          gcsescience.com

Products from Oil

Disposing of Polymers.

Although polymers are very useful materials,
there are problems with disposal of unwanted articles.

Polymers are not biodegradable.
This means that decomposers (bacteria and fungi)
will not break them down into simpler substances.
If they are buried in the ground (called landfill)
they simply remain as polymers in the ground.

Products from plant material (wood, paper, cotton etc.) are biodegradable.
When buried, bacteria and fungi break them down into useful nutrients
for further plant growth. Nature recycles its own products!

Polymers are a fire hazard.
Many people die from the smoke of burning polymers in house fires,
long before the fire reaches them.
Polymers produce toxic materials (poisons) when they are burnt,
in addition to the expected products from combustion of hydrocarbons
which are carbon dioxide, water, carbon monoxide and carbon (soot).
Those polymers which contain chlorine (PVC for example)
also produce hydrogen chloride on burning.
Those which contain nitrogen (nylon for example) produce hydrogen cyanide.
Hydrogen cyanide is extremely poisonous.
Burning polymers is not a good way of disposing of them.


Solutions.

More and more polymers are being recycled.
This is not as cost effective as recycling metals,
but we don't want to live amongst piles of (unrotting) plastic.

Research into biodegradable polymers will increasingly provide
useful replacements for the main polymers of today.

back        Headings        Polymers        Search        Questions        next

gcsescience.com     Contents     The Periodic Table     Index     Quizzes    gcsescience.com

Copyright © 2008 Dr. Colin France. All Rights Reserved.