Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1985717 International Journal of Biological Macromolecules 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Traditional mineral oil based plastics are important commodity to enhance the comfort and quality of life.•Biopolymers are important alternatives to the petroleum-based plastics due to environment friendly manufacturing processes, biodegradability and biocompatibility.•PHAs are promising candidate for biodegradable polymers; however, the production cost limits their application on industrial scale.•This article provides an overview of various substrates, microorganisms for the economical production of PHAs and its copolymers.•Recent advances in PHAs to reduce the cost and to improve the performance of PHAs have also been discussed.

Traditional mineral oil based plastics are important commodity to enhance the comfort and quality of life but the accumulation of these plastics in the environment has become a major universal problem due to their low biodegradation. Solution to the plastic waste management includes incineration, recycling and landfill disposal methods. These processes are very time consuming and expensive. Biopolymers are important alternatives to the petroleum-based plastics due to environment friendly manufacturing processes, biodegradability and biocompatibility. Therefore use of novel biopolymers, such as polylactide, polysaccharides, aliphatic polyesters and polyhydroxyalkanoates is of interest. PHAs are biodegradable polyesters of hydroxyalkanoates (HA) produced from renewable resources by using microorganisms as intracellular carbon and energy storage compounds. Even though PHAs are promising candidate for biodegradable polymers, however, the production cost limit their application on an industrial scale. This article provides an overview of various substrates, microorganisms for the economical production of PHAs and its copolymers. Recent advances in PHAs to reduce the cost and to improve the performance of PHAs have also been discussed.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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