The First Threshold for Biodegradable Wet Wipes
How Physical Fragmentation Actually Occurs in Water Systems
In most real-world scenarios, biodegradable wet wipes begin to show structural changes within minutes or hours after entering wastewater systems. The fiber network—originally held together by entanglement, thermal bonding, or wet-strength chemistry—gradually loosens as water works its way through the structure.
Anyone who has observed this process in a lab flume or test tank will notice an important detail: fragmentation is neither instant nor uniform. Certain areas loosen early, while others remain intact for longer. Edges often separate first, while the center holds together. This uneven breakdown reflects differences in material composition and bonding strength across the wipe.
For this reason, evaluating environmental performance solely based on whether a wipe “disperses” in water is, at best, an oversimplification.