posted on 2023-10-02, 15:40authored byAntonia Garratt, Klaudia Nguyen, Alexander Brooke, Martin J. Taylor, Maria Grazia Francesconi
Plastic waste is a critical global issue, yet current
strategies
to avoid committing plastic waste to landfills include incineration,
gasification, or pyrolysis high carbon emitting and energy consuming
approaches. However, plastic waste can become a resource instead of
a problem if high value products, such as fine chemicals and liquid
fuel molecules, can be liberated from controlled its decomposition.
This letter presents proof of concept on a low-cost, low energy approach
to controlled decomposition of plastic, photocatalytic hydrolysis.
This approach integrates photolysis and hydrolysis, both slow natural
decomposition processes, with a photocatalytic process. The photocatalyst,
α-Fe2O3, is embedded into a polylactic
acid (PLA) plastic matrix. The photocatalyst/plastic composite is
then immersed in water and subjected to low-energy (25 W) UV light
for 90 h. The monomer lactide is produced as the major product. α-Fe2O3 (6.9 wt %) was found to accelerate the PLA degradation
pathway, achieving 32% solid transformation into liquid phase products,
in comparison to PLA on its own, which was found to not decompose,
using the same conditions. This highlights a low energy route toward
plastic waste upgrade and valorization that is less carbon intensive
than pyrolysis and faster than natural degradation. By directly comparing
a 25 W (0.025 kWh) UV bulb with a 13 kWh furnace, the photocatalytic
reaction would directly consume 520× less energy than a conventional
thermochemical pathway. Furthermore, this technology can be extended
and applied to other plastics, and other photocatalysts can be used.