Everything You Need To Know About Polylactic Acid (PLA)

Written by Dr. Bhargav Raval | Updated: March 20, 2026

Everything You Need To Know About Polylactic Acid (PLA)

Written by Dr. Bhargav Raval |  Updated: March 20, 2026

Introduction to Polylactic Acid (PLA)

Polylactic acid (PLA) is a biodegradable, bio-based thermoplastic derived from renewable resources such as corn starch, sugarcane, or cassava root. It is one of the most commercially significant bioplastics in the world — valued not only for its environmental credentials but also for its ease of processing, reasonable mechanical properties, and excellent printability in 3D printing (FDM) applications.

As sustainability goals drive material substitution across packaging, medical devices, textiles, and consumer products, understanding PLA’s properties, testing requirements, and limitations is essential for engineers and product designers.

Key Properties of PLA

Biodegradability: PLA is industrially compostable under controlled conditions (elevated temperature and humidity), breaking down into CO₂ and water within a defined timeframe. It is not rapidly biodegradable in standard landfills or marine environments.

Optical Clarity: PLA can be produced in transparent form with good optical clarity — useful for packaging and display applications.

Mechanical Properties: PLA exhibits tensile strength of approximately 50–70 MPa, a high modulus (~3.5 GPa), and low elongation at break (<10%), making it rigid yet somewhat brittle compared to conventional thermoplastics.

Thermal Limitations: PLA has a relatively low glass transition temperature (Tg ~55–65°C) and melting point (~150–180°C), limiting its use in hot environments. This is a significant constraint for hot-fill packaging and dishwasher-safe applications.

Processability: PLA processes well via injection molding, extrusion, blow molding, thermoforming, and FDM 3D printing, and is compatible with standard polymer processing equipment.

Biocompatibility: Medical-grade PLA is used for resorbable sutures, drug delivery systems, and bone fixation devices — gradually hydrolyzed and absorbed by the body over weeks to months.

PLA Testing Methods

Tensile Testing (ASTM D638, ISO 527): Tensile strength, modulus, and elongation at break — fundamental mechanical characterization for structural and packaging applications.

Impact Testing (ASTM D256): PLA’s inherent brittleness makes notched impact testing essential for applications that are subject to high loads

Thermal Analysis (DSC, ASTM E1356): DSC measures Tg, the cold crystallization temperature, and the melting enthalpy — thereby characterizing the crystallinity state and predicting thermal performance.

Biodegradation and Compostability Testing (ASTM D6400, ISO 17088): Standardized tests confirm that PLA meets industrial compostability requirements — essential for bioplastic claims and regulatory compliance.

Moisture Barrier Testing (ASTM F1249, E398): Measures water vapor transmission rate (WVTR) — critical for food packaging applications.

Melt Flow Rate (ASTM D1238): Characterizes PLA’s melt viscosity for processing control in injection molding and extrusion.

Industry Applications

Packaging: PLA is widely used for fresh food packaging, produce containers, deli containers, cold beverage cups, and biodegradable films where end-of-life compostability is a marketing or regulatory priority.

Medical Devices: PLA-based resorbable sutures, bone screws, drug-eluting implants, and scaffold materials for tissue engineering exploit its biocompatibility and controlled degradation profile.

3D Printing: PLA is the most popular material for desktop FDM 3D printing due to its low printing temperature, minimal warping, odorless processing, and wide color availability.

Textiles: PLA fibers are used in compostable nonwovens, disposable apparel, and some performance textiles.

Consumer Products: Single-use cutlery, disposable serviceware, and promotional items increasingly use PLA as a bioplastic alternative to conventional thermoplastics.

Conclusion

PLA’s bio-based origin, industrial compostability, and 3D printing compatibility make it a compelling material for sustainable packaging, medical resorbables, and consumer products — but its low Tg, brittleness, and moisture sensitivity impose real application boundaries that testing must validate before deployment. Characterization per ASTM D638, D256, E1356, and D6400 confirms mechanical integrity, thermal performance limits, and compliance with compostability standards, giving product designers the data needed to determine where PLA delivers on its sustainability promise and where conventional thermoplastics remain the more reliable engineering choice.

Why Choose Infinita Lab for PLA Testing?

Infinita Lab is a leading provider of PLA and bioplastics testing services, addressing the critical testing challenges of emerging bio-based materials. With access to a vast network of 2,000+ accredited partner labs across the United States, Infinita Lab ensures rapid, accurate, and cost-effective testing — from biodegradation and compostability validation to mechanical and thermal characterization.

Looking for a trusted partner to achieve your research goals? Schedule a meeting with us, send us a request, or call us at (888) 878-3090 to learn more about our services and how we can support you. Request a Quote.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PLA truly biodegradable?

PLA is industrially compostable — it degrades in commercial composting facilities at elevated temperature and humidity within 3–6 months. It does not biodegrade rapidly in home compost, landfill, or marine environments under normal conditions.

What is the main limitation of PLA compared to conventional plastics?

PLA's low heat resistance (Tg ~55–65°C) limits its use in applications involving elevated temperatures — including hot-fill packaging, dishwasher-safe containers, and under-hood automotive components.

Can PLA be used in medical applications?

Yes. Medical-grade PLA and PLLA (poly-L-lactic acid) are used for resorbable sutures, bone fixation screws, and scaffold materials. These grades are carefully controlled for molecular weight, purity, and degradation rate.

How does PLA perform in 3D printing compared to ABS?

PLA prints at lower temperatures (180–220°C vs 230–260°C for ABS), produces minimal warping and no strong odors, and is easier to print on entry-level equipment. ABS offers better impact resistance, heat resistance, and post-processing options. For structural or high-temperature applications, ABS or engineering-grade materials are preferred over PLA.

What ASTM standards apply to PLA compostability and biodegradation?

ASTM D6400 (compostable plastics) and ASTM D6868 (compostable coatings on paper) are the primary standards for industrial compostability claims. ISO 17088 is the international equivalent.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Dr. Bhargav Raval is a Materials Scientist and Client Engagement Engineer with expertise in nanomaterials, polymers, and advanced material characterization. He holds a Ph.D. in Nanosciences from the Central University of Gujarat, where his research focused on graphene-based materials for flexible electronics. Professionally, he has led R&D in sensor technologies and coatings, including polymer-functionalized piezoelectric sensors for breath-based cancer diagnostics. In his current role, Dr. Raval works closely with clients to understand technical requirements, design testing strategies, and deliver tailored solutions in materials selection, failure analysis, and performance evaluation. He effectively bridges scientific depth with practical outcomes, ensuring client-focused project execution. With peer-reviewed publications in high-impact journals and a proven record of applying materials science to real-world challenges, Dr. Raval continues to drive innovation at the intersection of research, engineering, and client engagement.

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