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Demonstration of a Chemical Recycling Concept for Polybutylene Succinate Containing Waste Substrates via Coupled Enzymatic/Electrochemical Processes
Author(s) -
Buchinger Richard,
Bischof Sabrina,
Nickel Ole,
Grassi Vanessa,
Antony Jasmin,
Ostermann Markus,
Gahlawat Soniya,
Valtiner Markus,
Meißner Robert,
Gübitz Georg,
Pichler Christian M.
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
chemsuschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.412
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1864-564X
pISSN - 1864-5631
DOI - 10.1002/cssc.202402515
Subject(s) - chemistry , aqueous solution , succinic acid , electrochemistry , organic chemistry , chemical engineering , electrode , engineering
Abstract Chemical recycling of polymer waste is a promising strategy to reduce the dependency of chemical industry on fossil resources and reduce the increasing quantities of plastic waste. A common challenge in chemical recycling processes is the costly downstream separation of reaction products. For polybutylene succinate (PBS) no effective recycling concept has been implemented so far. In this work we demonstrate a promising recycling concept for PBS, avoiding costly purification steps. We developed a sequential process, coupling enzymatic hydrolysis of PBS with an electrochemical reaction step. The enzymatic step efficiently hydrolyses PBS in its monomers, succinic acid and 1,4‐butanediol. The electrochemical step converts succinic acid into ethene as final product. Ethene is easily separated from the reaction solution as gaseous product, together with hydrogen as secondary product, while 1,4‐butanediol remains in the aqueous solution. Both reaction steps operate in aqueous solvent and benign reaction conditions. Furthermore, the influence of electrolyte components on the electrochemical step was unraveled by applying molecular dynamic simulations. The final coupled process achieves a total ethene productivity of 91 μmol/cm 2 over a duration of 8 hours, with 1110 μmol/cm 2 hydrogen and 77 % regained 1,4‐butanediol as valuable secondary products.
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