4.7 Article

Identification of Potential Migrants in Polyethylene Terephthalate Samples of Ecuadorian Market

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 13, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym13213769

Keywords

polyethylene terephthalate; PET; chemicals compounds; migration; additives; bottles

Funding

  1. ESPOL, through Decanato de Investigacion
  2. FIMCP

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This study identified various chemical compounds in PET samples obtained from the Ecuadorian market and categorized them accordingly. Overall migration tests on PET bottles showed values below the limit, but the presence of certain compounds in the samples could be linked to contamination during manufacturing or the use of contaminated PET flakes.
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is the plastic packaging material most widely used to produce bottles intended for contact with food and beverages. However, PET is not inert, and therefore, some chemical compounds present in PET could migrate to food or beverages in contact, leading to safety issues. To evaluate the safety of PET samples, the identification of potential migrants is required. In this work, eight PET samples obtained from the Ecuadorian market at different phases of processing were studied using a well-known methodology based on a solvent extraction followed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis and overall migration test. Several chemical compounds were identified and categorized as lubricants (carboxylic acids with chain length of C12 to C18), plasticizers (triethyl phosphate, diethyl phthalate), thermal degradation products (p-xylene, benzaldehyde, benzoic acid), antioxidant degradation products (from Irgafos 168 and Irganox), and recycling indicator compounds (limonene, benzophenone, alkanes, and aldehydes). Additionally, overall migration experiments were performed in PET bottles, resulting in values lower than the overall migration limit (10 mg/dm(2)); however, the presence of some compounds identified in the samples could be related to contamination during manufacturing or to the use of recycled PET-contaminated flakes. In this context, the results obtained in this study could be of great significance to the safety evaluation of PET samples in Ecuador and would allow analyzing the PET recycling processes and avoiding contamination by PET flakes from nonfood containers.

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