Antonio Jaime-Azuara, Thomas Helmer Pedersen and Reinhard Wimmer
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Chemical recycling of polymers to monomers and chemicals is a promising pathway to valorize plastic waste that cannot be mechanically recycled, thus potentially minimizing resource consumption and the overall CO2 impact of the polymer industry. Among chemical recycling technologies, solvolytic depolymerization of poly(ethylene terephthalate) stands out as a selective process that maximizes monomer recovery. However, many challenges still remain regarding the optimization of these recycling technologies. Addressing these challenges could lead to these technologies becoming truly environmentally advantageous compared to alternative waste management solutions. Subcritical water has proven to be an outstanding media for a broad variety of reactions and its potential as a green solvent for PET depolymerization is reassessed based on a new nuclear magnetic resonance quantification method allowing for product characterization to a degree never reported before. In order to study the intrinsic product composition at every reaction condition (280 to 340 °C and 0 to 45 min reaction time), depolymerization experiments were performed in agitated micro-batch reactors, and NMR analysis was conducted prior to any alkaline-based purification. The highest recovery of terephthalic acid was achieved after 45 min at 340 °C, however, under these conditions ethylene glycol experiences a high degree of degradation. Collected data was then used to compare the environmental performance of different case scenarios leading to the preferable conditions to be 5 min at 310 °C, where the recovery of terephthalic acid, ethylene glycol, mono(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate and bis(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate is as high as 0.9 g g?1 PET.
期刊介绍:
Green Chemistry is a journal that provides a unique forum for the publication of innovative research on the development of alternative green and sustainable technologies. The scope of Green Chemistry is based on the definition proposed by Anastas and Warner (Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice, P T Anastas and J C Warner, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1998), which defines green chemistry as the utilisation of a set of principles that reduces or eliminates the use or generation of hazardous substances in the design, manufacture and application of chemical products. Green Chemistry aims to reduce the environmental impact of the chemical enterprise by developing a technology base that is inherently non-toxic to living things and the environment. The journal welcomes submissions on all aspects of research relating to this endeavor and publishes original and significant cutting-edge research that is likely to be of wide general appeal. For a work to be published, it must present a significant advance in green chemistry, including a comparison with existing methods and a demonstration of advantages over those methods.