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Polyvinyl chloride (PVC), a
thermoplastic resin, is among the top three most widely used plastics
in the world. PVC is used in a diverse number of applications. Some of
these include construction materials, packaging materials, and water
transportation pipes. PVC is also heavily used in internal automobile
parts: up to 80% of internal automobile parts are composed of PVC. PVC
is made by a polymerization reaction of the monomer vinyl chloride.

Wypych,
George, Handbook of Plasticizers, 2004.
Figure 1 Polymerization
reaction of PVC.
A phthalate ester, di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP),
is often added as a PVC plasticizer to impart flexibility. Plasticizers
function by interfering with the crystalline structure of the PVC
matrix, so that the PVC chains can slip past one another. Refer to
figure 2 below. Commercial PVC plastics contain up to 40% by weight of
DEHP.

Wypych,
George, Handbook of Plasticizers, 2004.
Figure 2 Diagram showing
plasticization.
With 3-4 million tones of DEHP being produced
annually, the phthalate is causing increasing alarm as a pollutant in
many countries. 95% of DEHP produced is used as PVC plasticizers. The
general population is exposed to DEHP since PVC is used in such diverse
application and that DEHP is leaches through consumer products. DEHP,
bound by only weak van der Waals forces, is not chemically bound to PVC
and so is prone to leaching into the environment. DEHP emission occurs
during plastic production, use, and after disposal. Once disposed of,
DEHP does not undergo significant physio-chemical degradation.
In medical applications, DEHP can leach out from
the materials and travel into the media. There has been increasing
concern regarding how DEHP exposure impacts human health through
medical procedures such as intravenous therapy, enteral and parenteral
nutrition support, blood transfusion, hemodialysis, and extracorporeal
membrane oxygenation, and how exposure impacts the
environment and wildlife through leaching from water pipes and
landfills. Though DEHP is suggested to be of low acute
toxicity, long-term exposure may have an adverse effect on human
health. Studies of risk assessment have shown that DEHP has
critical effects on fertility, endocrine system, kidneys and
development. The Food and Drug Administration has issued a
report acknowledging that PVC medical devices are a concern to
critically ill infants. Furthermore, studies suggest that
chemicals with the ability to disrupt the endocrine system are a
potential threat to the health of humans, aquatic animals, and
wildlife. For aquatic organisms, there have been several
cases of documentation on the adverse effects of DEHP on Daphnia
and fish species. Another DEHP study has pointed towards
the perturbation of normal metabolism in liver, heart, testes, adrenal
gland, and brain in mammals such as rats, rabbits, and pigs.
The adverse effects of DEHP pose potential
environmental and health risks through leaching, making DEHP harmful in
terms of production, use, and disposal. To address the source of the
problem, we hoped to reduce emissions of DEHP by finding suitable,
safe, and biodegradable alternative PVC plasticizers.
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