Knowledge Base

Patch Composition — Full Material Breakdown

Draft High Research 1,597 words Created Mar 3, 2026

Patch Composition — What's Actually In There

Scale

MetricValueRange
Total mass79,000-100,000 tonnes45,000-129,000 tonnes
Total pieces1.8 trillion1.1-3.6 trillion
Area1.6 million km²(>1 kg/km² microplastic contour)
Per-capita~250 pieces per human on Earth
Mass equivalence500+ jumbo jets
Growth rate~10× per decade since 1945Exponential, not linear

Size Classes (The Paradox)

Microplastics dominate by count (94%). Megaplastics dominate by mass (53%). 92% of the mass is in objects larger than 5mm — graspable, collectible objects.

Size ClassSize Range% of Pieces% of MassMean Density (kg/km²)Peak Density (kg/km²)
Megaplastic>50 cm0.0002% (3.2M)53% (42,000 t)46.3428.1
Macroplastic5-50 cm0.05% (821M)25% (20,000 t)16.870.4
Mesoplastic0.5-5 cm3% (56B)13% (10,000 t)3.988.4
Microplastic0.05-0.5 cm94% (1.7T)8% (6,400 t)2.526.4
Implication for The Claw: The bulk of recoverable mass is in large objects — nets, ropes, crates, buoys, containers. A collection system targeting mega/macroplastic captures 78% of the mass while dealing with <1% of the piece count.


Polymer Composition

The GPGP is overwhelmingly dominated by buoyant polymers (density < seawater at 1.025 g/cm³).

Polymer% by MassDensity (g/cm³)Common Forms FoundEnergy Content (MJ/kg)
Polyethylene (PE) — HDPE + LDPE87-96%0.91-0.97Bottles, containers, film, bags, crates46.3
Polypropylene (PP)4-10%0.90-0.91Rope, bottle caps, fishing gear, oyster spacers46.4
Polystyrene (PS)~3%0.96-1.05Foam fragments, expanded polystyrene41.9
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)~1%1.16-1.58Pipe fragments (only foamed pieces float)Low
PET, Nylon, othersTrace>1.0Sink — not found in significant surface quantities31.0 (nylon)
Station-by-station sampling:
  • Station 1: 92% PE, 8% PP
  • Station 2: 96% PE, 4% PP
  • Station 3: 94% PE, 6% PP
  • Station 4: 91% PE, 9% PP
Key insight for processing: The feedstock is essentially two polymer families (PE and PP). PET, nylon, and solid PS sink and are largely absent from the surface patch. This massively simplifies processing — no need for multi-polymer sorting. Both PE and PP have excellent energy content (46+ MJ/kg) for plasma gasification.

Exception — Fishing Nets: Nylon (polyamide) nets sink in their clean state but persist in the GPGP because they're bulky, tangled with buoyant debris, and often attached to floats. Nylon constitutes a significant mass fraction within the fishing gear category despite its higher density.


What's In It — Object Breakdown

By Category (6,000+ items analyzed from System 001/B retrieval)

Object Category% by Count% by MassNotes
Fishing nets46%Single largest mass category. Tangled nylon/PE.
Floats and buoys3%21%Few objects but individually very heavy
Unidentifiable fragments33%28%Weathered beyond recognition
Fishing/aquaculture gear (fish boxes, oyster spacers, eel traps)26%8%Second most common by count
Food/drink items (bottle caps, lids, containers)13%LowMostly caps and lids
Ropes and linesSignificantSignificantPart of fishing gear total

Fishing Gear Total

  • 75-86% of all GPGP plastic by mass originates from fishing activities
  • 86% of megaplastics (>50cm) are fishing nets
  • Includes: nets, ropes, lines, traps, buoys, fish boxes, oyster spacers, crates, FADs (Fish Aggregating Devices — bamboo rafts wrapped in plastic webbing with satellite buoys)

Specific Objects Identified

  • Fish boxes and crates (PE/PP)
  • Oyster spacers (PP)
  • Eel trap cones
  • Packaging straps
  • Drifting FADs (Fish Aggregating Devices)
  • Buckets, baskets, drums, jerry cans
  • Bottle caps and lids
  • Containers of all sizes
  • A Nintendo Game Boy cover (1995)
  • Hard hats
  • Baby bottles, lighters, toothbrushes, cell phones

Country of Origin

From 6,000+ hard plastic items with readable text, logos, or brand names:

Country/Region% of Identifiable Items
Japan34%
China32%
South Korea10%
United States7%
Taiwan6%
Other/unidentifiable~11%
Languages found on 386 readable objects: 9 different languages. One-third Japanese inscriptions, one-third Chinese.

These five nations contributed an estimated 87% of fishing waste to the North Pacific garbage patch annually (based on simulated fishing effort + ocean current modeling). The debris is overwhelmingly from industrialized Asian fishing fleets, not from land-based consumer waste.


Age of Debris

MetricValue
Oldest identified itemBuoy from 1966 (~60 years old)
% produced before 200049% of datable objects
Specific dated itemsCrate from 1977, hard hat from 1989, Game Boy from 1995
Production date range1977 to 2010 (on readable items)
Residence timeDecades — items persist without fully degrading
The patch is a time capsule. Nearly half the datable objects are from the 20th century. Plastic that enters the gyre center stays for decades. It does not self-clean.


Degradation & Fragmentation

How Long Things Last (Marine Environment)

MaterialEstimated Degradation Time
Fishing line~600 years
Expanded polystyrene~500 years
Plastic bottles (PE/PET)~450 years
Six-pack rings~400 years
Plastic bags10-20 years (to fragment, not disappear)
Caveat: NOAA notes these commonly cited figures lack rigorous peer-reviewed backing. Actual degradation is highly variable.

Measured Surface Degradation Rates

  • Up to 469.73 μm/year surface loss (12× higher than previous estimates)
  • HDPE estimated half-lives: 58 years (bottles) to 1,200 years (pipes)

The Fragmentation Multiplier

1 milligram of weathered plastic can produce 100,000 to 1,000,000 microplastic particles, most under 2 μm.

  • UV photo-oxidation breaks polymer chains, incorporates oxygen
  • Plastic remains visually intact while chains break internally
  • After sufficient weathering, "onset of fragmentation" — pieces break off under mild mechanical stress (waves)
  • If left to fragment, microplastic count could increase 30-fold to ~50 trillion particles
This is the ticking clock. Every year of inaction, large collectible plastic fragments into microplastic that is orders of magnitude harder to recover. The window for macro-scale cleanup is narrowing.


Toxic Contamination

  • 84% of GPGP plastic samples contain persistent bioaccumulative toxic (PBT) chemicals
  • PBTs include: PCBs, DDT, PAHs, heavy metals
  • Plastic acts as a sponge — absorbs toxins from seawater
  • Concentration factor: plastic surfaces can carry toxin levels 100-1,000,000× higher than surrounding water
  • Marine organisms that ingest contaminated plastic bioaccumulate these toxins
  • Surface has 180× more plastic than food (by mass) — organisms confuse plastic for food
Implication for processing: Any processing method MUST destroy PBTs, not just relocate them. This is a key argument for plasma gasification (15,000°F+ destroys all organic toxins at molecular level) vs. lower-temperature methods that may not.


Biofouling — The Hidden Complication

Marine organisms colonize floating plastic, changing its properties:

Colonization Timeline

TimeWhat Happens
Minutes-hoursBacterial biofilm begins forming
DaysMeasurable biofilm established
1 weekEPS layer thickens, photosynthetic organisms (diatoms, cyanobacteria) appear
2 weeksSome plastics begin sinking
6 weeksPE can sink when colonized by blue mussels; PS sinking velocity +16-81%
2-12 monthsBags become heavy enough to sink via thermohaline currents

The Oscillating Inventory

Biofouled plastic exhibits oscillatory vertical movement: 1. Biofilm grows → plastic sinks 2. At depth, reduced light kills biofilm → plastic rises 3. At surface, biofilm regrows → plastic sinks again 4. Cycle repeats

Surface collection captures what is currently buoyant, not total inventory. There is a substantial "hidden" pool cycling below the surface.

Saving Grace

In the oligotrophic (nutrient-poor) gyre center, biofouling is SLOW. Particles 0.01-1mm do NOT sink within 90 days. The gyre's low nutrient levels actually help keep plastic at the surface longer, making collection more feasible.

Impact on Processing

  • Biofouled plastic carries additional water + organic mass
  • Barnacles, algae, and organisms must be handled by the processing system
  • Salt crystals form on dried, biofouled surfaces
  • Plasma gasification handles all of this — organic material is just more fuel

Ghost Nets — The #1 Target

  • Up to 1 million tonnes of ghost nets enter oceans annually
  • Ghost nets are the deadliest form of marine plastic — unselectively kill marine mammals, seabirds, turtles, sharks
  • Nets drift with currents, continuously "fishing" with nobody hauling them in
  • A single expedition by Ocean Voyages Institute removed 40 tonnes
  • Detection: AI-powered sonar (WWF GhostNetZero + Microsoft), aerial SWIR imaging, GPS buoy tracking

Depth Distribution

Depth Zone% of MassNotes
Surface to 5m~90%Primary collection zone
5m to 2,000m~10% (but 56-80% of small-particle mass)Dispersed, harder to collect
Below 2,000mUnknownMicroplastics detected at every depth sampled
SeafloorUnknownAccumulated settled plastic
Over 12,000 fragments analyzed using multi-level trawl (11 water layers to 5m) and deep sampling to 2,000m. Polymer composition at depth matches surface (PE, PP) — confirming vertical transport of the same material.


Seasonal & Annual Variation

FactorBehavior
Patch centerOscillates W↔E seasonally
During El NiñoConvergence Zone dips to 28°N, more debris hits Hawaiian beaches
Annual growth~2.5% per year (mass)
Decade growth10× per decade since 1945
Fragment density5× increase from 2015 to 2022 (combined small fragments)

Fragment Accumulation (2015 → 2022, Seven-Year Study)

Metric20152022Change
Small fragment mass2.9 kg/km²14.2 kg/km²
Hotspot particles1M/km²10M+/km²10×
Mesoplastics (5-50mm)34K items/km²235K items/km²
74-96% of fragment increase comes from foreign sources (newly fragmented legacy plastic arriving from elsewhere), not in-situ degradation. The patch is a sink for the entire North Pacific's fragmenting plastic.


The Claw's Processing Profile Summary

ParameterValueImplication
Primary polymersPE (87-96%), PP (4-10%)Essentially two polymer families — no sorting needed
Energy content46.3 MJ/kg (PE), 46.4 MJ/kg (PP)Comparable to crude oil — excellent for plasma gasification
Largest mass targetFishing nets (46% of mass)Need industrial shredder that handles tangled nylon
Graspable objects (>5cm)78% of mass, <1% of piecesCollection should focus on large objects
Toxic contamination84% contain PBTsMust destroy, not relocate — plasma at 15,000°F+
BiofoulingAdditional water + organic massPlasma handles organics; dewatering is critical
Salt contaminationSignificantCorrosion management + dewatering critical
Growth trendExponentialUrgency — fragments become uncollectable microplastic
Source nationsJapan (34%), China (32%), Korea (10%)Potential funding/partnership targets for cleanup
Feedstock lifetimeDecades of debris accumulationNo "running out of garbage" problem (unlike Utashinai)

Sources

  • Nature Scientific Reports (2018) — Lebreton et al.
  • The Ocean Cleanup research data, press releases, scientific publications
  • NOAA Marine Debris Program
  • National Geographic
  • Our World in Data — GPGP fishing gear analysis
  • ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering — degradation rates
  • PMC — biofouling and sinking characteristics
  • Ocean Cleanup seven-year fragment monitoring study