Washington State University researchers have developed an innovative way to convert plastics to ingredients for jet fuel and other valuable products, making it easier and more cost effective to reuse plastics.
The researchers in their reaction were able to convert
90% of plastic to jet fuel and other valuable hydrocarbon products within an hour
at moderate temperatures and to easily fine-tune the process to create the
products that they want. Led by graduate student Chuhua Jia and Hongfei Lin,
associate professor in the Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical
Engineering and Bioengineering, they report on their work in the journal, Chem
Catalysis.
“In the recycling industry, the cost of recycling is
key,” Lin said. “This work is a milestone for us to advance this new technology
to commercialization.”
In recent decades, the accumulation of waste plastics
has caused an environmental crisis, polluting oceans and pristine environments
around the world. As they degrade, tiny pieces of microplastics have been found
to enter the food chain and become a potential, if unknown, threat to human
health.
Plastics recycling, however, has been problematic. The
most common mechanical recycling methods melt the plastic and re-mold it, but
that lowers its economic value and quality for use in other products. Chemical
recycling can produce higher quality products, but it has required high
reaction temperatures and a long processing time, making it too expensive and
cumbersome for industries to adopt. Because of its limitations, only about 9%
of plastic in the U.S. is recycled every year.
In their work, the WSU researchers developed a
catalytic process to efficiently convert polyethylene to jet fuel and
high-value lubricants. Polyethylene, also known as #1 plastic, is the most
commonly used plastic, used in a huge variety of products from plastics bags,
plastic milk jugs and shampoo bottles to corrosion-resistant piping,
wood-plastic composite lumber and plastic furniture.
For the process, the researchers used a ruthenium on
carbon catalyst and a commonly used solvent. They were able to convert about
90% of the plastic to jet fuel components or other hydrocarbon products within
an hour at a temperature of 220 degrees Celsius (428 degrees Fahrenheit), which
is more efficient and lower than temperatures that would be typically used.
Jia was surprised to see just how well the solvent and
catalyst worked.
“Before the experiment, we only speculated but didn’t
know if it would work,” he said. “The result was so good.”
Adjusting processing conditions, such as the
temperature, time or amount of catalyst used, provided the critically important
step of being able to fine-tune the process to create desirable products, Lin
said.
“Depending on the market, they can tune to what
product they want to generate,” he said. “They have flexibility. The
application of this efficient process may provide a promising approach for
selectively producing high-value products from waste polyethylene.”
With support from the Washington Research Foundation,
the researchers are working to scale up the process for future
commercialization. They also believe their process could work effectively with
other types of plastics.
Source: https://news.wsu.edu/2021/05/17/new-technology-converts-waste-plastics-jet-fuel-hour/
Journal article: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667109321000233?via%3Dihub
Source: New
technology converts waste plastics to jet fuel in an hour – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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