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    Home»Chemistry»New Recycling Process Could Cut Down on Millions of Tons of Plastic Waste
    Chemistry

    New Recycling Process Could Cut Down on Millions of Tons of Plastic Waste

    By University of Wisconsin-MadisonNovember 20, 20206 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Plastic Waste Recycling
    Engineers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a method called Solvent-Targeted Recovery and Precipitation (STRAP) processing to reclaim polymers from multilayer thermoplastics. The recovered polymers closely resemble those used in the original film. This innovation holds the potential for recovering 40% of plastic waste generated in multilayer plastic manufacturing, closing the recycling loop.

    Multilayer plastic materials are ubiquitous in food and medical supply packaging, particularly since layering polymers can give those films specific properties, like heat resistance or oxygen and moisture control. But despite their utility, those ever-present plastics are impossible to recycle using conventional methods.

    About 100 million tons of multilayer thermoplastics — each composed of as many as 12 layers of varying polymers — are produced globally every year. Forty percent of that total is waste from the manufacturing process itself, and because there has been no way to separate the polymers, almost all of that plastic ends up in landfills or incinerators.

    Now, University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have pioneered a method for reclaiming the polymers in these materials using solvents, a technique they’ve dubbed Solvent-Targeted Recovery and Precipitation (STRAP) processing. Their proof-of-concept is detailed today (November 20, 2020) in the journal Science Advances.

    By using a series of solvent washes guided by thermodynamic calculations of polymer solubility, UW-Madison professors of chemical and biological engineering George Huber and Reid Van Lehn and their students used the STRAP process to separate the polymers in a commercial plastic composed of common layering materials polyethylene, ethylene vinyl alcohol, and polyethylene terephthalate.

    The result? The separated polymers appear chemically similar to those used to make the original film.

    The team now hopes to use the recovered polymers to create new plastic materials, demonstrating that the process can help close the recycling loop. In particular, it could allow multilayer plastic manufacturers to recover 40 percent of plastic waste produced during the production and packaging processes.

    “We’ve demonstrated this with one multilayer plastic,” says Huber. “We need to try other multilayer plastics and we need to scale this technology.”

    As the complexity of the multilayer plastics increases, so does the difficulty of identifying solvents that can dissolve each polymer. That’s why STRAP relies on a computational approach used by Van Lehn called the Conductor-like Screening Model for Realistic Solvents (COSMO-RS) to guide the process.

    COSMO-RS is able to calculate the solubility of target polymers in solvent mixtures at varying temperatures, narrowing down the number of potential solvents that could dissolve a polymer. The team can then experimentally explore the candidate solvents.

    “This allows us to tackle these much more complex systems, which is necessary if you’re actually going to make a dent in the recycling world,” says Van Lehn.

    The goal is to eventually develop a computational system that will allow researchers to find solvent combinations to recycle all sorts of multilayer plastics. The team also hopes to look at the environmental impact of the solvents it uses and establish a database of green solvents that will allow them to better balance the efficacy, cost, and environmental impact of various solvent systems.

    The project stems from UW-Madison’s expertise in catalysis. For decades, the university’s chemical and biological engineering researchers have pioneered solvent-based reactions to convert biomass — like wood or agricultural waste — into useful chemicals or fuel precursors. Much of that expertise translates into solvent-based polymer recycling as well.

    The team is continuing its research on STRAP processing through the newly established Multi-University Center on Chemical Upcycling of Waste Plastics, directed by Huber. Researchers in the $12.5 million U.S. Department of Energy-funded center are investigating several chemical pathways for recovering and recycling polymers.

    Reference: “Recycling of multilayer plastic packaging materials by solvent-targeted recovery and precipitation” by Theodore W. Walker, Nathan Frelka, Zhizhang Shen, Alex K. Chew, Jesse Banick, Steven Grey, Min Soo Kim, James A. Dumesic, Reid C. Van Lehn and George W. Huber, 20 November 2020, Science Advances.
    DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aba7599

    This research was supported by a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-SC0018409).

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    Plastic Polymers Popular Recycling University of Wisconsin-Madison
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    6 Comments

    1. benny goss on November 21, 2020 1:27 pm

      If university of wiconsin can get strap working good we can start recycling plastic containers that are used for oil,antifreeze,ect and barrels that hold chemicals.

      Reply
    2. Shadrack Moloi on November 21, 2020 6:51 pm

      Hello I am a self motivated Nature Conservation Activist,,,AND Write of A book called HEAL THE PLANET.
      WE would like to partner wit you here in South Africa,,,,as a CO,,OPERATIVE,,,
      Thanking you in angucapaken
      Shadrack Moloi

      Reply
    3. Myrtle on November 21, 2020 9:25 pm

      Good day I’m trying to do recycling of plastic. I would like to start making things out of it.

      Reply
    4. Rajesh Doshi on November 22, 2020 4:07 am

      Excellent job

      Reply
    5. I S Tedja on November 22, 2020 7:25 am

      Please keep me inform. I have recycled single layer plastic since 1992. Now there’s a lot of unrecycled multilayer plastic waste.
      Thanks.

      Reply
    6. Sikandar Karva on November 24, 2020 1:15 am

      INDIAN PLASTIC BUSINESS

      Reply
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