Polyethylene upcycling to long-chain alkylaromatics by tandem hydrogenolysis/aromatization
Author(s) -
Fan Zhang,
Manhao Zeng,
Ryan Yappert,
JiaKai Sun,
Yu-Hsuan Lee,
Anne M. LaPointe,
Baron Peters,
Mahdi M. AbuOmar,
Susannah L. Scott
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.abc5441
Subject(s) - aromatization , polyethylene , hydrogenolysis , catalysis , carbon fibers , materials science , chemistry , hydrogen , raw material , organic chemistry , composite material , composite number
The current scale of plastics production and the accompanying waste disposal problems represent a largely untapped opportunity for chemical upcycling. Tandem catalytic conversion by platinum supported on γ-alumina converts various polyethylene grades in high yields (up to 80 weight percent) to low-molecular-weight liquid/wax products, in the absence of added solvent or molecular hydrogen, with little production of light gases. The major components are valuable long-chain alkylaromatics and alkylnaphthenes (average ~C 30 , dispersity Ð = 1.1). Coupling exothermic hydrogenolysis with endothermic aromatization renders the overall transformation thermodynamically accessible despite the moderate reaction temperature of 280°C. This approach demonstrates how waste polyolefins can be a viable feedstock for the generation of molecular hydrocarbon products.
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