Non-equilibrium plasma co-upcycling of waste plastics and CO2 for carbon-negative oleochemicals

Abstract

Mechanical recycling and chemical upcycling by thermochemical reactions have been the major approaches for recycling end-of-life plastics. Herein, we report an electrified approach to upcycle waste plastics into carbon-negative commodity chemicals using greenhouse gas CO2 as the oxidant and additional carbon source. In this non-equilibrium plasma process, waste polyolefins were oxidatively depolymerized by plasma-activated CO2 to produce oleochemicals and hydrocarbon chemicals in a single-step process at high reaction rates. In addition, a mixture of CO2 and a small amount of O2 was employed as plasma gases to selectively produce fatty alcohols from polyolefins. Based on this atmospheric pressure, non-solvent, and non-catalyst process, up to 97.6% of fatty alcohols could be produced within minutes. In this article, the co-conversion approach was demonstrated using common polyolefins and real-world mixed waste plastics to obtain comparable results. The techno-economic analysis estimates the internal rate of return to be 42.2% and 43.5% for the plasma-based conversion of waste plastics, depending on the plasma gas composition. Lifecycle assessment indicates the global warming potential is between −3.33 and −3.07 kg CO2e per kg of plastic.

Graphical abstract: Non-equilibrium plasma co-upcycling of waste plastics and CO2 for carbon-negative oleochemicals

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 May 2024
Accepted
18 Jul 2024
First published
25 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Green Chem., 2024, Advance Article

Non-equilibrium plasma co-upcycling of waste plastics and CO2 for carbon-negative oleochemicals

H. Radhakrishnan, S. Gnangbe, A. Duereh, S. U. Iffat Uday, L. A, H. Hu, H. Hu, M. M. Wright and X. Bai, Green Chem., 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D4GC02340D

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