What Is a Biodegradable Material?

6 min read

Biodegradable materials are becoming increasingly important in modern chemistry, especially in environmental science, green chemistry, and sustainability discussions. IB Chemistry students explore biodegradability when learning about polymers, waste management, and how different materials interact with the environment. Understanding what makes a material biodegradable helps clarify why some plastics persist for centuries while others break down naturally.

What Is a Biodegradable Material?

A biodegradable material is a substance that can be broken down naturally by microorganisms—such as bacteria, fungi, and algae—into simple, non-toxic products like water, carbon dioxide, and biomass.

Key points:

  • Breakdown must occur through biological processes
  • Products must be environmentally harmless
  • The material must degrade within a reasonable timescale

Biodegradation contrasts with processes like photodegradation or oxidation, which do not rely on living organisms.

How Biodegradation Works

Biodegradation occurs in three stages:

1. Fragmentation

Microbes begin to attack the material, breaking large molecules into smaller ones.

2. Depolymerization

Enzymes break chemical bonds in polymer chains, reducing them to monomers.

3. Mineralization

Microorganisms convert these monomers into:

  • CO₂ (in aerobic conditions)
  • CH₄ (in anaerobic conditions)
  • Water
  • Biomass

This final step ensures the material leaves no harmful residue behind.

What Makes a Material Biodegradable?

A material’s biodegradability depends on its chemical structure.

1. Presence of functional groups

Groups like ester, amide, ether, and carbonyl make polymers more susceptible to microbial attack.

2. Molecular arrangement

Highly crystalline polymers degrade more slowly.
Amorphous regions allow easier microbial access.

3. Polymer size and branching

Long, heavily branched polymers take longer to break down.

4. Environmental conditions

Biodegradation rate increases with:

  • Heat
  • Moisture
  • Oxygen
  • Microbial activity

This is why compostable materials break down faster in industrial composters than in home compost.

Examples of Biodegradable Materials

Several natural and synthetic materials are biodegradable:

Natural biodegradable materials

  • Starch
  • Cellulose
  • Proteins
  • Paper
  • Cotton
  • Wood

These materials break down easily because they resemble biological molecules.

Biodegradable polymers

  • Polylactic acid (PLA)
  • Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs)
  • Starch-based plastics
  • Biodegradable polyesters

These synthetic materials are engineered to degrade under specific conditions.

Why Some Materials Are Not Biodegradable

Traditional plastics (like polyethylene and polypropylene) do not degrade because:

  • Their carbon–carbon backbones are extremely stable
  • They lack functional groups that enzymes can attack
  • Their hydrophobic nature prevents microbial interaction

As a result, these plastics persist for decades or centuries in landfills and oceans.

Biodegradable vs Compostable Materials

These terms are related but not identical.

Biodegradable:

  • Breaks down naturally
  • No time requirement
  • May require specific conditions

Compostable:

  • Must break down within a defined time
  • Must leave no toxic residue
  • Requires industrial or home compost conditions

All compostable materials are biodegradable, but not all biodegradable materials are compostable.

Environmental Importance of Biodegradable Materials

Biodegradable materials reduce the environmental impact of waste because they:

  • Do not accumulate long-term
  • Produce harmless byproducts
  • Lower the burden on landfills
  • Reduce microplastic pollution
  • Support sustainable manufacturing

These benefits align with green chemistry principles.

Biodegradability in IB Chemistry

IB students encounter biodegradability when studying:

  • Polymers
  • Green chemistry
  • Environmental chemistry
  • Life-cycle analyses
  • Sustainable materials

Biodegradable polymers are often compared to conventional plastics to highlight differences in structure and environmental impact.

Common IB Misunderstandings

“Biodegradable means dissolves in water.”

Incorrect—biodegradation requires microorganisms, not just water.

“All natural materials degrade quickly.”

Some natural materials (like lignin) degrade very slowly.

“Biodegradable plastics always break down in the ocean.”

Many require industrial composting conditions to degrade efficiently.

“All biodegradable plastics are environmentally harmless.”

Some degrade into micro-particles if improperly disposed.

FAQs

How fast does a biodegradable material break down?

It depends on temperature, moisture, and microbial activity; rates vary from weeks to years.

Are biodegradable plastics completely safe?

They can be safe, but only when disposed of correctly.

Do biodegradable materials produce methane?

Yes—under anaerobic conditions, biodegradation can produce methane.

Conclusion

A biodegradable material is one that microorganisms can break down into harmless products. Its biodegradability depends on chemical structure, functional groups, and environmental conditions. These materials are essential for reducing waste and promoting sustainability, making them a vital topic in both IB Chemistry and broader environmental science.

Join 350k+ Students Already Crushing Their Exams