Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Model tackles key obstacle to efficient plastic recycling

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Most people who separate their plastic waste for recycling assume the bulk of it will in fact be recycled. But current recycling methods, which “require sorting, grinding, cleaning, remelting and extrusion to obtain plastic pellets, usually lead to lower value materials because of contamination and mechanochemical degradation,” the authors of a new study write. As a result, only about 10% of the plastic that makes it to recycling facilities is recycled. The rest is incinerated, sent to landfills or ends up in the environment.

In their search for better methods, some researchers have explored pyrolysis, which uses heat to break plastic polymers down chemically, converting them into energy-rich compounds like oils. But pyrolysis requires high-energy inputs and creates toxic product mixtures that limit its potential as a large-scale solution to the problem of plastic waste.

Methods that use catalysts to systematically break down plastics for reuse offer a potentially more efficient and productive method, the scientists on the new study report. But predicting how different catalysts and chemical intermediates will interact at different stages of the process is a challenge.

Graphic depiction of Michaelangelo's hand of God reaching out for the hand of Adam, as Adam drops a plastic bottle on a heap of other trash. God comments, "Are you planning to recycle that?"
Graphic by Aven Peters

“To address the growing crisis of plastic pollution, many scientists are working on catalytic processes that break plastics back down into reusable building blocks,” said Baron Peters, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign who led the new research. “However, modeling these reactions is no easy task because reactants and intermediates have thousands of molecular weights and chemical functionalities.”

To address the limitations of current modeling approaches, the researchers developed a new framework that connects molecular scale processes — including chemical reactions and adsorption of polymers on the surface of catalysts — “with reactor-scale models that balance the inflow of molten plastic and outflow of products with changing contents and reactions in the reactor,” Peters said.

The findings are detailed in the journal Accounts of Chemical Research.

“The new model gives scientists a powerful tool for extracting molecular-level insight from reactor-scale measurements, or for making reactor-scale predictions from molecular-level mechanistic hypotheses,” said study co-author Lela Manis, a Ph.D. student at Illinois.

“These models have helped our team design new catalyst architectures that mimic nature’s strategy for processive depolymerization,” said study co-author, Ph.D. student Jiankai Ge. “They also have allowed us to identify reaction conditions that boost selectivity of value-added products.”

Quantitative models of the catalytic breakdown of plastic polymers will help design catalysts and implement solutions for the ongoing problem of plastic waste, the researchers said.

This work was supported by the Institute for Cooperative Upcycling of Plastics, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences, via subcontract from Ames National Laboratory.


Editor’s note:  

To reach Baron Peters, email baronp@illinois.edu.  

To reach Jiankai Ge, email jiankai2@illinois.edu.

The paper “Population balance models for catalytic depolymerization: From elementary steps to multiphase reactors” is available online.

DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.5c00088

Read Next

Physical sciences Sarah Park and Karen Mortensen are seen surrounded by mathematical models, including an aluminum tower of cascading circles and a model featuring criss-crossing strings in a frame.

Historical math models recreated by students using 3D printing

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign students recreated some of the historical mathematical models owned by the U. of I. math department using a 3D printer. The Illinois math department has nearly 400 mathematical models — one of the world’s largest collections — from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The models demonstrate […]

Social sciences Sociology professor Brittney Miles shown in profile with a Black history mural at the Bruce D. Nesbitt African American Cultural Center on campus.in the background.

Black women’s beauty, fashion choices intertwined with Black history, politics

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Black women’s beauty and fashion are complex, meaningful acts, deliberate strategies for engaging with the world that make bold statements about identity, political resistance and empowerment, Black women said in a recent study. Researcher Brittney Miles, a sociology professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, interviewed 39 Black women about their fashion […]

Uncategorized Rows of MRI images from two patients with brain tumors

New MRI approach maps brain metabolism, revealing disease signatures

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A new technology that uses clinical MRI machines to image metabolic activity in the brain could give researchers and clinicians unique insight into brain function and disease, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign report. The non-invasive, high-resolution metabolic imaging of the whole brain revealed differences in metabolic activity and neurotransmitter levels […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010