Screening, Identification, and Degradation Mechanism of Polyester Fiber-Degrading Bacteria
Zixuan Chen, Jing Tang, Shengjuan Peng, Qin Chen, Jianfeng Bai, Weihua Gu

TL;DR
This paper explores how certain bacteria can break down polyester fibers, a type of plastic that is hard to degrade, offering potential solutions for managing plastic waste.
Contribution
The study identifies specific Bacillus strains capable of degrading polyester fibers and elucidates the degradation mechanism under mesophilic conditions.
Findings
Five Bacillus isolates degraded polyester fibers with mass losses up to 5–6% in 30 days.
Degradation involves surface erosion, ester-bond hydrolysis, and preferential amorphous region breakdown.
Biodegradation alters chemical, thermal, and surface properties of polyester fibers.
Abstract
Polyester fibers are extensively used in textiles, packaging, and industrial applications due to their durability and excellent mechanical properties. However, high-crystallinity polyester fibers represent a major challenge in plastic waste management due to their resistance to biodegradation. This study evaluated the biodegradation potential of environmental Bacillus isolates, obtained from mold-contaminated black bean plastic bags, toward polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and industrial-grade polyester fibers under mesophilic conditions. Among thirteen isolates, five (Bacillus altitudinis N5, Bacillus subtilis N6, and others) exhibited measurable degradation within 30 days, with mass losses up to 5–6% and corresponding rate constants of 0.04–0.05 day−1. A combination of complementary characterization techniques, including mass loss analysis, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), gel…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution · biodegradable polymer synthesis and properties · Polymer crystallization and properties
