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INTRODUCTION

Growing importance in product sustainability and a constant interest in the environmental impact of cellulose acetate-based cigarette filters has been driving intensive research activities to understand the biodegradation of cigarette filters. Cellulose acetate is defined in the Indian Standard IS 10335 (1) as “A secondary cellulose acetate commonly known as cellulose acetate in Tobacco industry. It is a white, odourless, tasteless, non-toxic, hydrophilic, partially acetylated cellulose acetate manufactured from natural, renewable resources such as wood pulp, which is used in making cigarette filters, textile, diapers and surgical products.” Secondary cellulose acetate used in the Cigarette Industry is commonly called as cellulose diacetate and is significantly different from primary cellulose acetate. Primary cellulose acetate is known as cellulose triacetate, where all the hydroxyl groups are completely acetylated, and for the manufacture of cigarette filter tow by dry spinning, a fully substituted cellulose acetate is not suitable. Therefore the cellulose triacetate is partially hydrolysed where the degree of substitution (DS) is adjusted around 2.4 to produce cellulose diacetate (2).

According to Zhou and collaborators, cellulose acetylation dramatically alters the surface characteristics of the product by altering the strongly hydrophilic nature of the cellulose by decreasing its polarity. As the degree of substitution increases, there is also a consistent increase in the hydrophobic character of the cellulose (3). Therefore, secondary cellulose acetate is different in its physical properties, chemical composition and also the degradation pattern.

An increased awareness of routes of degradation of cellulose acetate could prove useful to understand its persistence in the environment. Cellulose acetate degrades in a two-step process involving multiple degradation mechanisms (4). The first step is the elimination of acetyl groups from the cellulose acetate by either biodegradation, photo degradation or chemical degradation. The second step involves the biodegradation of the cellulose chain (Figure 1). The key mechanism for degradation is an initial deacetylation step by chemical hydrolysis and acetylesterases, thereby allowing the degradation of cellulose backbone with cellulase (56).

Figure 1

Mechanism of degradation of cellulose acetate.

Studies conducted on the biodegradability of cellulose acetate have confirmed that cellulose acetate is indeed biodegraded in a natural environment as measured by different methods (6,7,8). One of the more convincing degradation study was the aerobic biodegradation of radiolabeled cellulose acetate where the evolution of CO2 was monitored from in vitro samples with the acetyl carbons labeled with 14C (6). The study compared cellulose acetate with degrees of substitutions of 1.85, 2.07 and 2.57, and found that the biodegradation rates were reduced, but not inhibited, due to higher levels of acetyl group.

Two aerobic assay systems were studied for degrading cellulose acetate films viz., in vitro enrichment cultivation technique and activated sludge wastewater treatment system. The enriched culture was able to degrade cellulose acetate films within 2–3 weeks, as indicated by 67% weight loss. The industrial wastewater treatment system provided the same degradation (7). Also, the biodegradability of cellulose acetate films with DS between 1.7 and 2.5 under controlled composting conditions was studied, where the materials were exposed to biologically active laboratory aerobic test vessels at 53 °C (8). It was found that the films completely disappeared after incubation for 7 and 18 days, respectively. Bonanomi et al. have conducted trials with cellulose acetate cigarette filters on soil under ambient conditions and observed 37.8% degradation in two years (9). The same group continued the study with the same filters and reported 75% degradation in five years under similar conditions (10).

All these studies indicated that due to lack of common definition and standards to evaluate the degradability performance, different degradation rates were given for cellulose acetate. The latest review by Yadav and Hakkkarainen on cellulose acetate degradation has mentioned that weight loss or simple growth of microorganism on the surface of the material or degradation of lower molar mass fraction in the material should not be considered as the proof of degradation (11).

Therefore, there are several challenges associated in understanding the degradation of cellulose acetate cigarette filters. To address these issues in the recent past, many international standards for testing of biodegradability were published by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), the European Committee for Standardization (CEN), the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), the German Institute for Standardization (DIN), the Japanese Institute for Standardization (JIS) and the British Standards Institution (12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21). The published standards from these organizations for the evaluation of biodegradability have helped the industries to create biodegradable products. In this regard, it is noteworthy that over the years, novel cigarettes have been introduced with different designs having diverse filter components.

In this study, the most universally used standard ISO 14855-1 (12) was followed for evaluating the biodegradability of different types of smoked cigarette filters made up of paper, combination of cellulose acetate and paper, i.e., Combined Material Filter (CMF), Condensed Tobacco End (CTEC), Cellulose acetate with additives (DE-TowTM), Cellulose acetate, including bidi. The smoked filters are the filter tips that are removed from the remaining tobacco stubs after the cigarettes have been smoked. Individually, the components of cigarette butts are a concern due to the absence of any scientific rationale-based studies on biodegradation of cigarette filters using a standard methodology which has led to our biodegradability study of cigarette filters.

To the best of our understanding, this study is the first of its kind, where the entire spectrum of cigarette filters was studied to evaluate their biodegradability.

EXPERIMENTAL
Materials

Cigarettes made with five different filter materials including Condensed Tobacco End (CTEC), Infused paper (IP), Cellulose acetate (CA), Combined Material Filter (CMF), DE-TowTM Filters (with additives) and Bidi from one of the leading brands were selected for the study.

Chemicals

Barium Hydroxide (Ba(OH)2) (AR grade), Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) (AR grade), Hydrochloric acid (HCl) (32% aqueous solution, AR grade), Potassium hydrogen phthalate (C8H5KO4) (AR grade), Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) (AR grade), Phenolphthalein indicator and pH solutions of within the range of (4.0, 7.0, 10.0) were procured from Merck (Mumbai, Maharashtra, India).

Instrumentation

The following glassware and equipments were used in the study: Digital dual range balance (Sartorius-BSA224S-CW, Sartorius-BSA6202S-CW, Sartorius AG, Göttingen, Germany) to weigh test materials, Grinder (Philips Preethi Blue Leaf, Chennai, India) for powdering, deep freezer (Blue Star, Chennai, India), refrigerator (Samsung 230L, Seoul, Korea), orbitek shaker (Scigenic Biotech, LX-D, Kerala, India), micropipettes (Brands, Frankfurt/Main, Germany), UV-Vis spectrophotometer (Shimadzu UV-1700, Kyoto, Japan), muffle furnace (Nabertherm, Type LT 40/12 B410, Lilienthal, Germany) (set to 550 ± 10 °C for volatile solids determination), hot air oven (MMM Venticell Drying Oven, MMM Climacell, Planegg, Germany) (set to 105 ± 10 °C for determination of total dry solids), glassware (burettes, measuring cylinders, beakers, conical flasks from Borosil, Bangalore, India), customized test vessels with test jar, linear smoking machine (Cerulean SM 450, Cerulean, Milton Keynes, UK).

Experimental setup

Water bath consisting of a series of 24 test vessels of approximately 3000 mL internal volume with a temperature-controlling system capable of maintaining the temperature of composting vessels at 58 ± 2 °C and equipped with pressurized-air system that provides air to each of the composting vessels at an accurate aeration rate. Each composting vessel was connected to a 5000-mL glass bottles consisting of barium hydroxide (Ba(OH)2) solution for the trapping of CO2 (Figure 2).

Figure 2

Schematic diagram of experimental setup for measuring the amount of carbon dioxide evolved.

All the reagents were prepared from analytical grade chemicals and dissolved in Type-2 water with a resistivity of > 1 MΩ•cm, a conductivity of < 1 μS/cm and < 50 ppb of total organic carbons (TOCs).

Reagents preparation
Preparation of 0.0125 M Barium hydroxide solution

4.0 g of anhydrous Ba(OH)2 was dissolved in one litre of Type-2 water to obtain 0.0125 M solution. The solution was sealed immediately to prevent absorption of CO2 from air. Note: It is recommended that large amount of solution would be prepared at a time when running a series of tests. However, when using Ba(OH)2, care must be taken that a film of BaCO3 does not form on the surface of the solution in the beaker, which would inhibit CO2 diffusion into the absorbing medium.

Preparation of 0.05 M HCl solution

4.4 mL of concentrated HCl (35%) was slowly transferred to a 1000-mL standard flask containing 100 mL of water followed by slow addition of another 600 mL of water, mixed thoroughly and allowed to cool at room temperature. The volume was made up to 1000 mL with Type-2 water. Note: Keep the solution for at least one hour and then carry out the standardization.

Preparation of inoculum

Well aerated compost with sufficient porosity was obtained from a properly operating, aerobic composting plant, wherein, by controlled conditions organic plant waste is broken down through microbial action. The compost was stabilized by allowing to mature for 2 to 4 months in a well aerated environment to cease the degradation and was afterwards sieved through a screen of 0.9 cm to obtain homogeneous compost, which was used for the preparation of inoculum.

The compost was analysed for all the parameters as per the standard ISO 14855-1 (12) (total dry solids, total volatile solids and pH) and the results were all within the specified limits (Table 1). Additional parameters that characterized the compost quality such as total nitrogen and organic carbon, C/N ratio and microbial population i.e., total plate count (TPC) (22) and yeast and mould count (YMC) (23) were also evaluated.

Result of compost analysis.

Serial No. Parameters Result Specification as per ISO 14855-1 Analytical Method
1 Total dry solids (%) 52.0 50 – 55 ISO 14855-1
2 pH of compost 8.77 7 – 9 ISO 14855-1
3 Total volatile solids of compost (%) 29.7 # 30 ISO 14855-1
4 Organic carbon (%) 10.8 In-house validated method using CHNS* analyzer
5 Total nitrogen (%) 2.04 In-house validated method using Kjeldahl apparatus (KjelMaster K 375)
6 C/N Ratio 5.29 ISO 14855-1
7 Total Plate Count, cfu/g (TPC) 8.5 × 105 IS 5402Part 1:2021
8 Yeast and Mould, cfu/g (YMC) 2.0 × 104 IS 5403:1999 (Reaffirmed 2018)

CHNS: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and sulphur

Sample preparation for the study

All the cigarette and bidi samples selected for the study were smoked using a linear smoking machine. Cigarettes were smoked as per regime (puff volume: 35 cc, puff duration: 2 s, puff frequency: 60 s) following the standard ISO 3308 (24) and bidi were smoked as per regime (puff volume: 35 cm3, puff duration: 2 s, puff frequency: 30 s) following the standard ISO 17175 (25). After smoking the respective cigarette filter portion and the whole unburnt portion of bidi (1.5–2.0 cm) were powdered for further study using a grinder.

Methodology

Customised glass flasks with a volume of 3000 mL with scope for even gas flow in an upward direction were used as test vessels. One set of tests contained 3 parallel vessels for the test material, blank and reference substance (microcrystalline cellulose of 20 μm) respectively. The powdered smoked cigarettes filters and smoked bidi butts were mixed with the inoculum at 1:6 ratio (weight/weight) with a total of 700 g test mixture (100 g of sample and 600 g of inoculum) and introduced into static composting vessels maintaining 50–55% moisture content. The ratio of nitrogen to organic carbon of the test mixtures were in agreement with the specifications, which ranged from 1:10 to 1:40. About 1/4th of the total volume of test vessels was empty in order to have sufficient headspace for regular manual mixing of test materials to prevent extensive channeling and to provide a uniform attack of the microorganisms like bacteria, fungi etc.

The test vessels were intensively composted under constant flow of air, 58 ± 2 °C temperature and 50% moisture. During this process the organic portion of the cigarette filters and bidi butts undergo aerobic biodegradation by the microorganism present in the inoculum to produce CO2, H2O and biomass.

The carbon dioxide produced was trapped in 0.0125 M Ba(OH)2 solution. The amount of carbon dioxide produced was determined by titrating the remaining barium hydroxide with standardized 0.05 M hydrochloric acid to determine the carbon dioxide production rate (19). The carbon dioxide produced was continuously monitored, measured at regular intervals, in test and blank vessels to determine the cumulative carbon dioxide production by successive addition of carbon dioxide over the period of time. The reaction mechanism is described as follows in the equation CO2+Ba(OH)2BaCO3+H2OBa(OH)2+2HClBaCl2+2H2O \matrix{ {C{O_2} + Ba{{\left( {OH} \right)}_2} \to BaC{O_3} + {H_2}O} \hfill \cr {Ba{{\left( {OH} \right)}_2} + 2HCl \to BaC{l_2} + 2{H_2}O} \hfill \cr }

The mass of CO2 trapped in the absorption bottle was calculated using the formula given below m(milligrams)=((2CB×VBO)/CAVA×(VBt/VBz))CA×22 m\left( {milligrams} \right) = \left( {\left( {2{C_B} \times {V_{BO}}} \right)/{C_A} - {V_A} \times \left( {{V_{Bt}}/{V_{Bz}}} \right)} \right){C_A} \times 22 where

m is the mass of CO2 trapped in the absorption bottle, in mg;

CA is the exact concentration of the HCl solution, in mol/L;

CB is the exact concentration of the Ba(OH)2 solution, in mol/L;

VA is the volume of the HCl solution used for titration, in mL;

22 is half of the molecular mass of CO2;

VB0 is the volume of the Ba(OH)2 solution at the beginning of the test, in mL;

VBt is the volume of the Ba(OH)2 solution at time t, before titration, in mL;

VBZ is the volume of the aliquots of Ba(OH)2 solution used for titration, in mL.

After determining the carbon content (%) of the test material using CHNS analyser, percentage of biodegradation was calculated as percentage of solid carbon of the test material, which was converted to gaseous mineral carbon as CO2.

The theoretical amount of carbon dioxide (ThCO2), which can be produced by a total oxidation of added test material and reference material, was calculated by using the formula given below ThCO2=Mt×Ct×4412 ThC{O_2} = {M_t} \times {C_t} \times {{44} \over {12}} where

ThCO2 is the theoretical amount of carbon dioxide in g

Mt is total dry solid in g;

Ct is the total organic carbon in the test material in g;

44 is the molar mass of carbon dioxide;

and 12 is the mass of carbon.

From the accumulated amount of biologically produced carbon dioxide measured in the test vessel (CO2) t and in the blank vessel (CO2) b, the degree of biodegradation (Dt) was calculated by Dt(%)=((CO2)t(CO2)b)/ThCO2×100 {D_t}\left( \% \right) = \left( {{{\left( {C{O_2}} \right)}_t} - {{\left( {C{O_2}} \right)}_b}} \right)/ThC{O_2} \times 100 where

Dt is the grade of biodegradation in %

(CO2) t is the carbon dioxide measured in the test vessel in g;

(CO2) b is the carbon dioxide measured in blank vessels in g;

ThCO2 is the theoretical amount of carbon dioxide in g.

An average degree of biodegradation of parallel vessels was calculated once the deviation in single measurements was less than 20%. In order to obtain a biodegradation curve, the degrees of biodegradation were plotted as a function of experimental days.

Validity of the test

The most important part of the study according to the standard method ISO 14855-1 (12) is the validity of the test and as the criteria prescribed for validation (i.e., the degree of biodegradation of the reference material is higher than 70% after 45 days) were fulfilled for the reference (cellulose), as 70% pass level was attained in 38 days. In addition the difference between the percentage of biodegradation of the reference materials in the parallel vessels was within 2.24 – 6.35%, which is less than 20%. Blank compost produced 97.0 mg of CO2/g of volatile solids after 10 days of incubation, this is well within the range of 50 – 150 mg CO2/g volatile solids and complies with the standard (Table 2).

Validity of the test.

Parameters Result Specification
Degree of biodegradation of reference materials 70% in 38 days 70% in 45 days
CO2 per g of volatile solids after 10 days (mg/g) 97.0 mg/g of volatile solids 50–150 mg of CO2/g of volatile solids after 10 days of incubation
Difference between % biodegradation of the reference material 2.24 – 6.35% Less than 20%

Compliance with the validity criteria also indicated the quality of compost and viability of microorganisms, which has contributed to achieve reproducible test results.

The difference in percentage biodegradation between the replicates for all the samples varied from −6.20 to 5.28%, indicating that the results were within the variation limits, i.e., less than 20% and complied with the requirement specified in the standard (Table 3) (26).

Degree of biodegradation and percentage variation between the samples.

Serial No. Sample identity Experimental day Rep-1 Rep-2 Rep-3 Mean Variance in % biodegradation
1 CTEC filter 37 95.6 90.7 99.7 95.3 0.28 −4.86 4.58
2 Bidi butt 54 91.6 90.9 93.7 92.1 −0.51 −1.27 1.77
3 IP filter 55 98.3 90.3 91.5 93.4 5.28 −3.28 −2.00
4 CMF filter 86 99.7 98.8 90.3 96.2 3.57 2.63 −6.20
5 DE-TowTM filter 97 95.0 90.1 90.5 91.9 3.41 −1.92 −1.49
6 CA filter 151 90.1 92.2 94.1 92.1 −2.21 0.07 2.13
Gel permeation chromatography

Gel Permeation Chromatography (GPC) is the most appropriate technique used to measure the absolute molecular weight of synthetic as well as natural polymers. Herein, GPC technique was considered to measure the molecular weight of the resulting compost from bio-degraded cigarette filter samples of cellulose acetate, CMF and DE-TowTM as well as their smoked cigarette filter samples before subjecting to biodegradation, to understand whether these filter samples have completely biodegraded. The resulting compost of Bidi butts, CTEC and infused paper filter samples were not subjected to GPC analysis, as they are made from plant materials.

The resulting compost as well as the smoked cigarette filters were extracted with acetone, dried and extracted with tetrahydrofuran (THF) for GPC analysis. A single solution of the resulting compost of all the samples and corresponding control smoked filter sample were prepared by dissolving 0.5 g of sample in 10.0 mL of THF by sonication. The GPC method was optimized for the sample matrix to produce reliable results (27).

The number average molecular weight (Mn) and weight average molecular weight (Mw) were calculated from molecular weight distributions on the basis of Waters polystyrene calibration standards of known molecular weight. The Waters GPC was run at 35 °C in THF using a column system by Styragel HR3, HR4, HR1 (5 μm, 7.8 × 300 mm), 0.75 mL/min flow and refractive index detection systems.

Data acquisition and data analysis were carried using Waters Empower 3 software.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Degree of biodegradation

It is evident from the cumulative degree of biodegradability of different smoked cigarette filters and bidi butts (Figure 3), that the first sample to achieve more than 90% biodegradation was CTEC filter, i.e., 95.3% in 37 days being the fastest, which can be attributed to tobacco stem, used for making these filters.

Figure 3

Degree of biodegradation of test samples.

In the case of bidi butts, 92.1% biodegradation in 54 days was observed. Bidi, with Tendu leaf as outer wrapper was expected to degrade faster, but the result was contrary to the expectation. In order to understand the reason behind the biodegradation pattern, Bidi components were investigated, the findings indicated that the Tendu leaf used in Bidi as a wrapper has lower porosity and combustibility with very hard leaf structure unlike tobacco stem used in CTEC filters. As per literature, Tendu leaf possesses antimicrobial properties (28), which might have inhibited the microbial growth resulting in slower biodegradation rates compared to CTEC filter.

Biodegradation of 93.4% in 55 days similar to bidi butts was recorded in infused paper filters. Faster biodegradation of this filter can be attributed to processed paper being made of cellulose that is used in the production of Infused paper filter. Combined material filter attained 96.2% biodegradation in 86 days. The slower rate of biodegradation of CMF filter (86 days) compared to CTEC filter (37 days), bidi butt (54 days) and infused paper filter (55 days) can be attributed to the presence of cellulose acetate and crimped paper 60:40.

Apart from cellulose acetate, DE-TowTM filter contains additives, e.g., an alkaline metal oxide to facilitate faster biodegradation, and has exhibited 91.9% degradation in 97 days. This result points out that incorporation of food grade additives in the cellulose acetate matrix supports the essential microbial activity and thus accelerates the biodegradation process (29). These additives facilitate the hydrolysis of acetate groups, thereby increasing the rate of biodegradation which is reflected in the result of the biodegradation of the DE-TowTM filter.

Cellulose acetate filter completed 92.1% biodegradation in 151 days and indicated that cellulose acetate used in cigarette filters is biodegradable in microbially active environments. However, cellulose acetate shows a slower biodegradation rate of 151 days compared to other filter materials, probably caused by the necessity of biofilm formation of at least two different microbes, i.e. a microbe (Bacillus subtilis, Acinetobacter) with acetyl esterase enzyme, which removes the acetyl groups and a microbe (Pseudomonas) with cellulase enzymes which break down the cellulose ring (5). The present study confirmed that the cellulose acetate used in cigarette filters is undoubtedly biodegradable and thus confirming to the standard ISO 14855-1.

Results of gel permeation chromatography (GPC)

When characterizing cigarette filters, we have considered the polydispersity and the molecular weight, since polymers have been characterized by various definitions for molecular weight including the number average molecular weight (Mn), the weight average molecular weight (Mw), and the peak molecular weight (Mp). Polydispersity was calculated based on Mn, and Mw data.

Chromatograms for cellulose acetate filter (CA), combined material filter (CMF), DE-TowTM filter control and their resulting compost samples in THF recorded as signal intensity versus time response or elution time (expressed in min) are depicted in Figures 4, 5 and 6.

Figure 4

GPC Chromatogram of cellulose acetate filter – A. Control (smoked filter) and B. Sample (resulting compost of smoked filter).

Figure 5

GPC Chromatogram of combined material filter – A. Control (smoked filter) and B. Sample (resulting compost of smoked filter).

Figure 6

GPC Chromatogram for DE-Tow™ filter – A. Control (smoked filter) and B. Sample (resulting compost of smoked filter).

Molecular weight test results (average in daltons) from GPC analysis indicated that resulting compost of cellulose acetate filters, combined material filters and DE-TowTM filters have completely degraded, as no traces of these materials were found in GPC analysis. In order to confirm these results, control samples of each of the respective substances were analysed and the molecular weights are given here:

Cellulose acetate filter: 109357 daltons (Figure 4), combined material filter (CMF): 145918 daltons (Figure 5) and DE-TowTM Filter: 87135 daltons (Figure 6).

These result further confirmed that cellulose acetate-based cigarette filters have been completely biodegraded within 180 days under the conditions applied as per ISO 14855-1. Apart from the biodegradation study on cigarette filters and bidi butts, the resulting compost was evaluated for the presence of regulated metal content as per the list in the Indian Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016, and it was observed the concentrations of regulated metals were lower than specified limits and that they were in compliance with the rule.

CONCLUSIONS

This study has proved that different cigarette filters viz., conventional and non-conventional cellulose acetate (CA) filters, infused paper filters, combined material filters (CMF), condensed tobacco end filters (CTEC) and bidi butts are biodegradable as per the standard ISO 14855-1. Cigarette filters and bidi butts considered for the study have achieved more than 90% biodegradation well within 180 days, thereby meeting the criteria specified in biodegradation standards. Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) analysis of cigarette filters containing cellulose acetate have confirmed that there is no trace of cellulose acetate in the resulting compost, establishing that cigarette filters are completely biodegradable. Most importantly, it provided a strong rationale-based scientific evidence for all the selected cigarette filters made with conventional as well as newly developed cellulose acetate, that they are completely biodegradable.

eISSN:
2719-9509
Język:
Angielski
Częstotliwość wydawania:
4 razy w roku
Dziedziny czasopisma:
General Interest, Life Sciences, other, Physics