Let’s take a look at each of these distinctive plastics in more detail.
1. Acrylic or Polymethyl Methacrylate (PMMA)
Well-known for its use in optical devices and products, acrylic is a transparent thermoplastic used as a lightweight, shatter-resistant alternative to glass. Acrylic is typically used in sheet form create products such as acrylic mirrors and acrylic plexiglass. The transparent plastic can be made colored and fluorescent, abrasion-resistant, bullet-resistant, UV-tolerant, non-glare, anti-static and many more. In addition to being than glass and polycarbonate sheeting, acrylic is seventeen times more impact resistant than glass, easier to handle and process, and has endless applications.
2. Polycarbonate (PC)
Tough, stable, and transparent, polycarbonate is an excellent engineering plastic that is as clear as glass and two hundred and fifty times stronger. Thirty times stronger than acrylic, clear polycarbonate sheets are also easily worked, molded, and thermo-formed or cold-formed. Although extremely strong and impact-resistant, polycarbonate plastic possesses inherent design flexibility. Unlike glass or acrylic, polycarbonate plastic sheets can be cut or cold-formed on site without pre-forming and fabrication. Polycarbonate plastic is in a wide variety of products including greenhouses, DVDs, sunglasses, police riot gear, and more.
3. Polyethylene (PE)
The most common plastic on earth, polyethylene can be manufactured in varying densities. Each different density of polyethylene gives the final plastic unique physical properties. As a result, polyethylene is in a wide variety of products.
Here are the four common polyethylene densities: Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE)
This density of polyethylene is ductile and used to make products like shopping bags, plastic bags, clear food containers, disposable packaging, etc. Medium-Density Polyethylene (MDPE)
Possessing more polymer chains and, thus, greater density, MDPE is typically in gas pipes, shrink film, carrier bags, screw closures, and more. High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE)
More rigid than both LDPE and MDPE, HDPE plastic sheeting is in products such as plastic bottles, piping for water and sewer, snowboards, boats, and folding chairs. Ultra High Molecular Weight Polyethylene (UHMWPE)
UHMWPE is not much denser than HDPE. Compared to HDPE, this polyethylene plastic much more abrasion resistant due to the extreme length of its polymer chains. Possessing high density and low friction properties, UHMWPE is in military body armor, hydraulic seals and bearings, biomaterial for hip, knee, and spine implants, and artificial ice skating rinks.
4. Polypropylene (PP)
This plastic material is a thermoplastic polymer and the world’s second-most widely produced synthetic plastic. Its widespread use and popularity are undoubted because polypropylene is one of the most flexible thermoplastics on the planet. Although PP is stronger than PE, it still retains flexibility. It will not crack under repeated stress. Durable, flexible, heat resistant, acid resistance, and cheap, polypropylene sheets are used to make laboratory equipment, automotive parts, medical devices, and food containers. Just to name a few.
5. Polyethylene Terephthalate (PETE or PET)
The most common thermoplastic resin of the polyester family, PET is the fourth-most produced synthetic plastic. Polyethylene Terephthalate has excellent chemical resistance to organic materials and water and is easily recyclable. It is practically shatterproof and possesses an impressive high strength to weight ratio. This plastic material is in fibers for clothing, containers for foods and liquid, glass fiber for engineering resins, carbon nanotubes, and many other products that we use on a daily basis.
6. Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)
The third-most produced synthetic plastic polymer, PVC can be manufactured to possess rigid or flexible properties. It is well-known for its ability to blend with other materials. For example, expanded PVC sheets are a foamed polyvinyl chloride material that is ideal products like kiosks, store displays, and exhibits. The rigid form of PVC is commonly in construction materials, doors, windows, bottles, non-food packaging, and more. With the addition of plasticizers such as phthalates, the softer and more flexible form of PVC is in plumbing products, electrical cable insulation, clothing, medical tubing, and other similar products.
7. Acrylonitrile-Butadiene-Styrene (ABS)
Created by polymerizing styrene and acrylonitrile in the presence of polybutadiene, ABS is robust, flexible, glossy, highly processable, and impact resistant. It can be manufactured in a range of thicknesses from 200 microns to 5mm with a maximum width of 1600mm. With a relatively low manufacturing cost, ABS plastic sheeting is typically used in the automotive and refrigeration industries but is also in products such as boxes, gauges, protective headgear, luggage, and children’s toys.
9. PLASMOG: Plastic-Smoke-Fog
Triumvirate in the Air
International Plastic-Free Day, May 25, 2026
Former Professorial Lecturer, UST, DLSU-D, SPU-QC, UPHR
Plastic disintegrates, enters body via bloodstream
PLASMOG Plastic-Smoke-Fog - Triumvirate in the Air.
Detail of painting. Plastic undergoing degradation into microplastic (dispersed into the air) and nanoplastic that enters the body through the lungs and bloodstream.
Plasmog rules the sky at sunrise and sunset, robbing the joy of waking up and disturbing our peace at angelus and rest;
Plasmog covers the sky like a huge crown depriving us to marvel at the brightness of the sun, moon and stars;
Plasmog deprives us to breath freely the freshness of air and breeze, enjoy watching the rainbow, the sparkle of dew and rain;
Plasmog hovers over cities trapping millions under a blanket of sick air
deleterious to health and well-being;
Plasmog settles nil and slow, leaving much of its unpleasant residues on our table, bedroom, parks and playground;
Plasmog recycles daily at increasing rate and coverage, picking up new and more pollutants in the process;
Plasmog exacerbates generation and accumulation of pollutants on land,
water, and air on a global scale;
Plasmog is everywhere, in our home, school, garbage dump, landfill, traffic lanes, etc., in increasing presence;
Plasmog degenerates in microplastic and nanoplastic, releases its basic components, independent of Nature's cycle;
Plasmog challenges human intellect and rationality, science, technology - philosophy, notwithstanding. Are we killing ourselves?
Plasmog enters cells of living organisms through various means, such as bloodstream in animals and humans;
Plasmog interferes with immunity and natural resistance, predisposing us to cancer, kidney failure and other ailments;
Plasmog questions the relevance and sincerity of our religious faith, ideological values, under our seeming indifference;
Plasmog urges us to reduce to a safe level this a by-product of our highly industrial world, for the sake of humanity;
Plasmogs robs us of Nature's beauty and the Good Life, all in the name of
progress and affluence.
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ANNEX - Plastic-Smoke-Fog triumvirate
The "Plastic-Smoke-Fog triumvirate" describes the toxic atmospheric mix of microplastics, combustion smoke (like from wildfires or incinerators), and natural or industrial fog. This combination creates an insidious, hazardous haze that traps volatile chemicals and worsens global air quality.
Plastic: Microplastics and nanoplastics constantly float through urban and rural air, often transported long distances by wind currents and sea spray. When plastic is burned, it releases persistent organic pollutants (POPs) and toxic micro-particulates.
Smoke: Smoke from unregulated plastic waste burning or wildfires contains a dangerous cocktail of chemicals, including dioxins, heavy metals, and styrene.
Fog: Fog droplets act as micro-reactors that can absorb these toxic airborne chemicals and trap particulate matter near the ground. Acknowledgement Sources Wikipedia/Internet,
ANNEX - National Research Council of the Philippines (NRCP)
THE GROWING THREAT OF MICROPLASTICS AND PLASTICS
The World Bank estimates that the Philippines use an overwhelming 163 million pieces of sachets per day. A staggering 2.3 million tons of plastic waste are generated in the country annually. Unfortunately, only 28% of key plastic resins are being recycled while the rest are simply discarded. So, where does the remaining 72% of these plastics go? To find it, one no longer needs to go to the nearest scrap shop but they can simply open their refrigerators.
In celebration of the National Science and Technology Week (NSTW) 2022, the National Research Council of the Philippines made the call to increase awareness in the growing threat of microplastics and plastics on food security, environment, and health by featuring NRCP-funded Projects on plastics in the marine environment and microplastic contamination among marine species.Flow of how plastics and microplastics from environment affect food
security and health
Despite the convenience and other benefits brought about by the invention of plastics, shown above is the general flow of how these materials negatively affect our environment, food security, and health. A presentation of NRCP-funded project titled, Marine Microbes and Plastic Debris: Research Status and Opportunities in the Philippines by Balik Scientist and UP Diliman Associate Professor in Marine Science Institute Dr. Deo Florence Onda, the plastic-microbe interactions in marine environments and its implications with the unresolved plastic pollution issues in the country was discussed.
Scientist and UP Diliman Associate Professor in Marine Science Institute Dr. Deo Florence Onda; NRCP Regular Member from the Division of Engineering and Industrial Research, Dr. Rey Y. Capangpangan
Dr. Onda’s team sampled 240 mussels in eight (8) study sites such as the wet market in Marikina, fish port in Navotas, fish landing center in Bacoor, riverside in Obando, aquaculture farms in Antique, Bayabay, Macelelon, and Bicol. Dismally, 100% of the samples have tested positive for microplastics. Most of the plastics found in their study are type 4 plastics such as thin plastic wraps, labels, packaging, foamed fragments, fishing lines, nets and ropes, bags, straws, and pipettes.
The Balik Scientist speaker, Dr. Onda, reiterated that there is a need to support and strengthen plastic research in the Philippines given the implications of plastics and microplastics in various aspects of our lives.
It is even more alarming to know that pieces of evidence from the study led by NRCP Regular Member from the Division of Engineering and Industrial Research, Dr. Rey Y. Capangpangan, proves that plastic debris and microplastics are present in various fish, sediment, water, and benthic organisms.
Through the NRCP-funded project titled, Assessment of plastic debris and of microplastics in different specimen (fish, sediment, water, benthic organisms) in selected aquatic environments in Mindanao and exploration of relative stress biomarkers, Dr. Capangpangan and his research team discovered that “microplastics are found in cultured and in wild and in nekton and benthos organisms.”
Of the 383 extracted particles collected from 30 bangus samples in Butuan and Nasipit Fish Cage, 235 were confirmed to be microplastics. Meanwhile, out of 163 extracted particles from 135 individual mud clams in mangrove stations along Butuan Bay, 30 were also confirmed as microplastics.
NRCP Regular Member from the Division of Engineering and Industrial Research, Dr. Rey Y. Capangpangan
DOST Secretary Dr. Renato U. Solidum, Jr. stated the importance of the NRCP’s NSTW webinar as this is a step to ensure that while we profit from our natural resources, we should also ensure its sustainability for the benefit of Filipinos in the future.

Indeed, “Big threats come in small particles” National Research Council of the Philippines’ Executive Director Dr. Marieta Bañez-Sumagaysay emphasized as she closed the hybrid event.
Written By: Regine Pustadan, Information. THE GROWING THREAT OF MICROPLASTICS AND PLASTICS.
Acknowledgement with thanks, Dr AV Rotor. For radio broadcast reference on TATAKalikasan AdMU, (Hosts Fr JM Manzano SJ, & Prof Emoy Rodolfo, AdMU; Guests: Dr Hernando Bacosa, JR Romerate, and Jerome Tejano), Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid and Usapang Bayan (Host: Ms Melly Tenorio).
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