• Polymer enables tougher recyclable therm

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Fri Aug 13 21:30:38 2021
    Polymer enables tougher recyclable thermoplastics

    Date:
    August 13, 2021
    Source:
    Cornell University
    Summary:
    Researchers took a middling monomer and, by using a special
    catalyst, they created a tougher polymer that can form long
    chains. The polymer can then be easily depolymerized back to the
    monomer state with an acid catalyst, resulting in a chemically
    recyclable thermoplastic that competes with the most popular
    plastics, polyethylene and polypropylene.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    To synthesize plastic, small monomer molecules need to be strung together
    like beads in a necklace, creating long polymer chains.


    ========================================================================== However, not all plastics -- or their polymers -- are created equal. The
    longer and stronger the polymer, the more durable the material.

    Cornell researchers took a middling monomer and, by using a special
    catalyst, they created a tougher polymer that can form long chains. The
    polymer can then be easily depolymerized back to the monomer state with
    an acid catalyst, resulting in a chemically recyclable thermoplastic that competes with the most popular plastics, polyethylene and polypropylene.

    The team's paper, "Chemically Recyclable Thermoplastics from Reversible- Deactivation Polymerization of Cyclic Acetals," published Aug. 13
    in Science.

    The co-lead authors are former postdoctoral researcher Brooks Abel and
    Rachel Snyder, Ph.D. '21.

    "Ideally, the perfect polymer is one that has really high initial stresses
    and then it undergoes really good elongation," said Geoffrey Coates,
    the Tisch University Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences,
    and the paper's senior author. "The polymers you've probably heard of, polyethylene and polypropylene, they just have great properties. A lot
    of new polymers don't compare well with these tried-and-true ones. Our
    polymer is right in the middle of the pack. It has been around for
    60 or 70 years, but no one's been able to make really long chains
    of it and get really good properties." In an unexpected twist, the
    discovery didn't emerge from conventional plastics research but rather
    from the Coates Group's involvement with the Joint Center for Energy
    Storage Research, an interdisciplinary collaboration launched by the
    U.S. Department of Energy to realize next-generation batteries. Coates
    and his team had been working to develop sustainable polymers that can
    be used in energy storage and conversion materials when they realized
    their polymer - - poly(1,3-dioxolane) or PDXL -- was well-suited for
    creating a thermoplastic - - a material with properties that allow it
    to be melted, recycled and remolded.



    ==========================================================================
    The researchers built their polymer from a cyclic acetal monomer
    called dioxolane, which is synthesized from potentially biorenewable formaldehyde and ethylene glycol feedstocks. Polyacetals are strong
    candidates for creating recyclable thermoplastics because they are
    stable upward of 300 degrees Celsius, but depolymerize at relatively
    low temperatures -- usually below 150 degrees Celsius -- in the presence
    of an acid catalyst. They are also inexpensive and can be biologically
    sourced. However, polyacetals have not seen prior use because the
    polymer chains are generally too short to achieve the mechanical strength necessary for commercial applications.

    "We wanted to develop a new way to make polyacetals that would give us
    control over the length of the polymer chains," Abel said. "Ultimately,
    we were able to make really high molecular weight polyacetals that were surprisingly ductile and strong as compared to their more brittle, low molecular weight counterparts." "If you want to make a cup that doesn't
    crack when you flex it, you need to get really high molecular weight,"
    Coates said.

    Using a process called reversible-deactivation cationic ring-opening polymerization, the researchers were able to connect the monomers into
    long chains of PDXL that have high molecular weight and high tensile
    strength.

    The resulting thermoplastic is strong and flexible enough to be
    used for large- scale applications such as packaging products. The
    team demonstrated this potential by creating several prototype items,
    including protective pouches, molded packaging and inflatable air pillows
    of the sort Amazon uses to pad their boxes.



    ========================================================================== "Right now, nearly 40% of plastic is produced for packaging products
    that are used briefly and then disposed," Snyder said. "PDXL has the
    necessary strength for packaging, but instead of throwing it away, we
    can collect and repurpose it using a very efficient chemical recycling
    process. This makes it a perfect candidate for a circular polymer
    economy." The recycling process is so efficient that PDXL can even be depolymerized from complex mixtures of plastic waste. The team mixed
    PDXL with other commodity plastics like polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene and polystyrene. After applying a reusable acid catalyst
    and heat, they were able to recover 96% of the pure dioxolane monomer, demonstrating that it can be easily isolated from common contaminants
    like dyes and plasticizers. The recovered monomer was then repolymerized
    to PDXL, illustrating the circularity of polyacetal chemical recycling.

    This points to the polymer's most significant attribute: its
    sustainability.

    "It takes a lot of fossil fuels to make these plastics, and the carbon footprint of common polyethylene or polypropylene is really bad. So we've
    got to be better at how we make them," Coates said. "If you can have a
    way that you can chemically recycle the polymer, it's not going to go in
    the ocean, right? And then instead of using all this energy to take oil
    out of the ground and break it up in little pieces and spend all this
    energy, all we have to do is just heat up the polymer and boom, we have
    a monomer again." The research was supported by the U.S. Department of
    Energy through the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Cornell_University. Original written
    by David Nutt, courtesy of the Cornell Chronicle. Note: Content may be
    edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Brooks A. Abel, Rachel L. Snyder, Geoffrey W. Coates. Chemically
    recyclable thermoplastics from reversible-deactivation
    polymerization of cyclic acetals. Science, 2021; 373 (6556):
    783 DOI: 10.1126/ science.abh0626 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/08/210813152014.htm

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