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What is Plastic

Handbook of Research on Environmental and Human Health Impacts of Plastic Pollution
A synthetic material made from wide range of organic polymers such as polyethylene, PVC, nylon, etc., that can be molded into shape while soft, and then set into a rigid or slightly elastic form.
Published in Chapter:
Environmental Phthalate Exposure in Relation to Reproduction Outcomes and Health Endpoints
Anjum Afshan (University of Kashmir, India), Md Niamat Ali (University of Kashmir, India), and Farooz Ahmed Bhat (SKUAST-K, India)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-9452-9.ch017
Abstract
Environmental pollutants, like xenobiotic substances released as byproducts of anthropogenic actions, naturally lead to pollution of the environment. They negatively affect the environment through unfavorable impacts on growth, development, and reproduction of organisms including humans. One of the outstanding examples of xenobiotics is endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) such as phthalate esters (PEs), which have the efficacy to disturb numerous biological systems including the invertebrate, reptilian, avian, aquatic, and also the mammalian systems. Phthalates are family of xenobiotic hazardous compounds amalgamating in plastics to intensify their plasticity, flexibility, longevity, versatility, and durability. Ignoring the rising issue on the hazardous nature of various phthalates and their metabolites, ruthless usage of phthalates as plasticizer in plastics and as additives in innumerable consumer products continues due to their low eminent properties, their cost-effectiveness, and lack of suitable alternatives. Globally epidemiological human studies showed various phthalates and their metabolites ingested passively by man from the general environment, foods, drinks, breathing air, and routine household products cause various dysfunctions. This comprehensive chapter on the hazards of phthalates would benefit the general population, academia, scientists, clinicians, environmentalists, and law or policymakers to decide upon whether usage of phthalates to be continued swiftly without sufficient deceleration or regulated by law or to be phased out from earth forever.
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Marine Plastic Debris: Distribution, Abundance, and Impact on Our Seafood
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Environmental and Health Implications of Plastic Pollution: A Pakistan Perspective
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Plastic Pollution and the Ecological Impact on the Aquatic Ecosystem
Plastic is versatile, lightweight, flexible, moisture resistant, strong, and relatively inexpensive. Those are the attractive qualities that lead us, around the world, to such a voracious appetite and over-consumption of plastic goods. However, durable and very slow to degrade, plastic materials that are used in the production of so many products all, ultimately, become waste with staying power.
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Factorial Design for Reduction of Variation on Plastic Parts Weight: Plastic Parts Weight and Injection Molding
Synthetic polymer capable of melting at certain temperatures to be manageable and malleable. This kind of material can be recycled.
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The Circular Economy of Plastics: Where We Are and Where We Can Go
Polymeric materials produced from mostly renewable and non-renewable raw materials, which have physicochemical properties that allow their use in a wide range of applications in modern society.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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