Selective deoxygenation of polar polymers using metal supported on TiO2 nanotubes†
Abstract
Polar polymers such as poly(vinyl alcohol-co-ethylene) (EVOH) serve as excellent oxygen barriers in multilayered polymer films. However, their presence creates significant challenges for subsequent recycling. Melting and thermal degradation leave behind small domains of immiscible phases that render the final material less valuable. Here, we report a strategy to selectively remove OH groups from the EVOH polymer while preserving the polymer's hydrocarbon backbone. Pd supported on TiO2 nanotubes exhibits excellent activity and selectivity for C–O bond scission and hydrogenation. This is evidenced in our study, which utilizes both the model compound 2,5-hexanediol (a small surrogate for polyols) and EVOH. The Lewis-acid sites generated on the TiO2 surface, coupled with hydrogen dissociation on the metal particles and unique sites at the metal support interface, result in enhanced deoxygenation rates to generate saturated products at atmospheric pressure. The intimacy between Pd particles and their TiO2 supports for EVOH conversion is also discussed.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Plastic Conversion