Scientists from the Universities of Bath and Birmingham have developed a new way of chemical recyclingâconverting plastics back into their constituent chemical moleculesâso that they can be used to make new plastics of the same quality as the original.
The teamâs method, published in ChemSusChem, also uses lower temperatures and more environmentally-friendly catalysts than previous methods.
âMost plastic is currently recycled using mechanical methods, where they are chipped into granules and melted down before being moulded into something new,â said Professor Matthew Jones, from the Centre for Sustainable and Circular Technologies at the University of Bath.
âThe problem is, melting plastic changes its properties, and reduces the quality, which limits the range of products in which it can be used.
âOur method of chemical recycling overcomes this problem by breaking down plastic polymers into their chemical building blocks, so they can be used all over again to make virgin plastic without losing any properties.â
The researchers recycled plant-based PLA, which is made from starch or crop waste instead of petrochemicals, and is used in âbiodegradableâ food packaging and disposable cutlery and cups. PLA isnât currently recycled because itâs not yet widely used, however with growing awareness of plastic pollution, the demand from consumers for recyclable packaging is growing.
The team has also started trialling a similar process for recycling PET, which is used for drink bottles.
âPLA is being increasingly used as a sustainable alternative for single-use plastics. Whilst itâs biodegradable under industrial conditions, it doesnât biodegrade with home composting, and isnât currently recycled, so at the moment, it commonly ends up contributing to the tons of waste in landfill and oceans,â said first author of the paper, Dr. Paul McKeown from the University of Bath.
âThere is no single solution to the problem of plastic wasteâthe approach has to be a combination of reducing, reusing and recycling. Our method of chemical recycling could allow carbon to be recycled indefinitelyâcreating a circular economy rather than digging more up from the ground in the form of fossil fuels, or releasing it into the atmosphere as a greenhouse gas.â
Source:GNN