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Microwave-initiated catalytic deconstruction of plastic waste into hydrogen and high-value carbons

Authors :
Yige Gao
Jonathan R. Dilworth
Hamid Al-Megren
Weisong Li
Saeed Alshihri
Sergio L. González-Cortés
Xiangyu Jie
Tiancun Xiao
Benzhen Yao
Ira Banerjee
Peter P. Edwards
John Meurig Thomas
Daniel Slocombe
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Research, 2020.

Abstract

The ubiquitous challenge of plastic waste has led to the modern descriptor plastisphere to represent the human-made plastic environment and ecosystem. Here we report a straightforward rapid method for the catalytic deconstruction of various plastic feedstocks into hydrogen and high-value carbons. We use microwaves together with abundant and inexpensive iron-based catalysts as microwave susceptors to initiate the catalytic deconstruction process. The one-step process typically takes 30–90 s to transform a sample of mechanically pulverized commercial plastic into hydrogen and (predominantly) multiwalled carbon nanotubes. A high hydrogen yield of 55.6 mmol g−1plastic is achieved, with over 97% of the theoretical mass of hydrogen being extracted from the deconstructed plastic. The approach is demonstrated on widely used, real-world plastic waste. This proof-of-concept advance highlights the potential of plastic waste itself as a valuable energy feedstock for the production of hydrogen and high-value carbon materials.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25201158
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e251b578705c0a02d9c35e6d5e290a50