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Active HORIZON European Commission

In-situ Mechano-catalysis for Polymer Activation and ConTrolled Conversion

€1.63M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Universiteit Utrecht
Country Netherlands
Start Date Jan 01, 2025
End Date Dec 31, 2029
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101164285
Grant Description

Less than 9% of plastic is recycled.

Currently applied recycling technology yields degraded materials because undesired mechano-chemical bond cleavage shortens the polymer upon repeated processing.

Here, I introduce a new type of catalyst to exploit this undesired effect to recover the polymer building blocks, the monomers, which enables the production of new high-quality polymer.

I will focus on polyolefins (PP, PE) that make up 50% of polymer production and for which the state-of-the-art pyrolysis process has high energy costs and does not yield pure monomer.

That is because at the 600 °C needed to break the strong carbon-carbon (C-C) bonds of PP and PE unwanted reactions occur.

Adding a catalyst powder, a known strategy to exert reaction control, is inefficient for polymers because they cannot reach the active sites in the catalyst pores.I will break the C-C bonds with force instead of heat.

The force is provided by collision of balls in a ball mill, a mature grinding technology that I repurpose as reactor to introduce my tunable direct mechano-catalyst: I will chemically treat the surface of the balls to create catalytic, e.g., acid, sites that are in efficient contact with polymer through vigorous ball movement.

In our ground-breaking proof-of-concept experiment, we were surprised to see monomer form below 60 °C from PP, and a remarkable 4x increased activity over a traditional catalyst.To realize the full potential of this new catalytic concept, I will establish the underlying fundamental framework by A) understanding the mechanism of reactions following C-C cleavage, B) developing a predictive model of cleavage rate as a function of temperature and force and C) understanding the synergistic interplay of catalytic spheres and mechano-chemical activation.

To achieve this, I will develop a new methodology for in-situ spectroscopy during ball milling in combination with radical trapping and apply the tunable direct mechano-catalysts to a variety of polymers.

All Grantees

Universiteit Utrecht

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