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Scientists Discover New Recycling Method to Convert Colored Plastics into Monomers

Published on 2023-07-28. Edited By : SpecialChem

TAGS:  Sustainability / Natural Solutions    

Recycling colored polymerScientists at Cardiff University have developed a new method of recycling-colored plastics offering possible solutions to huge environmental challenges.

The process, which breaks down colored polymers, the principal component of plastics, into their original components, could lead to a circular plastic recycling economy reducing pollution on land and in our oceans, the researchers claim.

Monomers for Strong & Stable Plastics


Widely used in drinks bottles, food packaging, clothing and electronics, colored plastics can be melted down and remolded into new products, but additives or colorants cannot be removed in current recycling processes.

To avoid the method of downcycling, where recycled plastic is of lower quality than the original material, the Cardiff team used a chemical process called depolymerization. Using a reactor based in the labs at Cardiff University’s School of Chemistry, the team chose specific molecules known as monomers to make plastics that are strong and stable, whilst adding in recyclability as part of the molecular design process.

Dr Ben Ward, Senior Lecturer in Inorganic Chemistry at Cardiff University, said, “Our current recycling economy only allows plastics and polymers to be recycled a finite number of times, after which they go to landfill or are incinerated. This is a huge environmental challenge. It is also a problem for industry who want to reuse and recycle colored polymers but are limited by additives which affect the quality and color of recycled products.

Further monomers were added to the reactor to give the plastics color while maintaining the same properties as the base materials. Through a chemical process called depolymerization, the team were able to unmake their products returning them to the original monomers. They found that the colors could be removed during the depolymerization process, making the plastics recyclable and more sustainable.

Dr Ward added, “What we’re showing is that this is a mechanism by which you can recycle plastics infinitely and that technology just doesn’t exist for traditional plastics. While industry doesn’t currently have the infrastructure to use our approach to plastics recycling, we’re showing chemical viability, laying the baseline from which this can be done in the future.

The team is currently working to refine the process further and make it more cost-effective, as well as ensuring that these new polymers can be processed for use in real-world products.

Source: Cardiff University
 


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