Menu
0
Total price
0 €
PRICES include / exclude VAT
>UNE EN ISO 19679:2021 - Plastics - Determination of aerobic biodegradation of non-floating plastic materials in a seawater/sediment interface - Method by analysis of evolved carbon dioxide (ISO 19679:2020)
sklademVydáno: 2021-11-17
UNE EN ISO 19679:2021 - Plastics - Determination of aerobic biodegradation of non-floating plastic materials in a seawater/sediment interface - Method by analysis of evolved carbon dioxide (ISO 19679:2020)

UNE EN ISO 19679:2021

Plastics - Determination of aerobic biodegradation of non-floating plastic materials in a seawater/sediment interface - Method by analysis of evolved carbon dioxide (ISO 19679:2020)

Plásticos. Determinación de la biodegradabilidad aeróbica de los materiales plásticos no flotantes en una interfaz agua de mar/sedimentos. Método por el análisis del dióxido de carbono liberado. (ISO 19679:2020).

Format
Availability
Price and currency
Anglicky PDF
Immediate download
Printable
82.80 €
Anglicky Hardcopy
In stock
82.80 €
Španělsky PDF
Immediate download
Printable
82.80 €
Španělsky Hardcopy
In stock
82.80 €
Označení normy:UNE EN ISO 19679:2021
Počet stran:21
Vydáno:2021-11-17
Status:Norma
DESCRIPTION

UNE EN ISO 19679:2021

This International Standard specifies a test method to determine the degree and rate of aerobic biodegradation of plastic materials when settled on marine sandy sediment at the interface between seawater and the seafloor, by measuring the evolved carbon dioxide. This test method is a simulation under laboratory conditions of the habitat found in different seawater/sediment-areas in the sea, e.g. in a benthic zone where sunlight reaches the ocean floor (photic zone) that, in marine science, is called sublittoral zone The determination of biodegradation of plastic materials buried in marine sediment is outside the scope of this International Standard. Measurement of aerobic biodegradation can also be obtained by monitoring the oxygen consumption, as described in ISO 18830. The conditions described in this International Standard may not always correspond to the optimum conditions for the maximum degree of biodegradation to occur.

Categories: