Issue 2, 2022

Back-to-monomer recycling of polycondensation polymers: opportunities for chemicals and enzymes

Abstract

The use of plastics in a wide range of applications has grown substantially over recent decades, resulting in enormous growth in production volumes to meet demand. Though a wide range of biomass-derived chemicals and materials are available on the market, the production volumes of such renewable alternatives are currently not sufficient to replace their fossil-based analogues due to various factors, in particular cost-effectiveness. Hence, the majority of plastics are still industrially produced from fossil-based feedstocks. Moreover, various reports have clearly raised concern about the plastics that are not recycled at their end-of-life and instead end up in landfills or the oceans. To avoid further pollution of our planet, it is highly desirable to develop recycling processes that use plastic waste as feedstock. Chemical recycling processes could potentially offer a solution, since they afford monomers from which new polymers can be produced, with the same performance as virgin plastics. In this manuscript, the opportunities for using either chemical or biochemical (i.e., enzymatic) approaches in the depolymerization of polycondensation polymers for recycling purposes are reviewed. Our aim is to highlight the strategies that have been developed so far to break down plastic waste into monomers, providing the first step in the development of chemical recycling processes for plastic waste, and to create a renewed awareness of the need to valorize plastic waste by efficiently transforming it into virgin plastics.

Graphical abstract: Back-to-monomer recycling of polycondensation polymers: opportunities for chemicals and enzymes

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
09 Nov 2021
Accepted
21 Dec 2021
First published
05 Jan 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2022,12, 947-970

Back-to-monomer recycling of polycondensation polymers: opportunities for chemicals and enzymes

S. Thiyagarajan, E. Maaskant-Reilink, T. A. Ewing, M. K. Julsing and J. van Haveren, RSC Adv., 2022, 12, 947 DOI: 10.1039/D1RA08217E

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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