Plastic recycling: James Hedrick, a scientist at IBM’s Almaden Research Center, is developing catalysts that help chemically recycle the PET plastic used to make these bottles.
Monica M. Davey/Feature Photo Service for IBM

Energy

Catalysts for Plastic Recycling

Chemical process can recycle PET bottles at lower temperatures.

  • Tuesday, March 9, 2010
  • By Katherine Bourzac

A plastic bottle tossed in the recycling bin may end up being shredded and reused to make a sweater or a carpet, but it won't be turned into another water bottle. At least not so far. Catalysts being developed by researchers at IBM and Stanford could make it cost-effective to break down polyethylene terephthalate, or PET, plastics into their constituent chemicals for reuse as bottles. The company is working to test its PET-recycling catalyst at a large scale to eventually develop it for industrial use.

Most plastic drink bottles are made from PET, as is anything with the "1" recycling stamp. Typically, the plastic is washed, mechanically ground, and mixed with "virgin" PET to make a polymer that's not suited for packaging but can be used to make secondary products, including clothes and carpeting.

Mechanical, rather than chemical, recycling is used for PET because it's too expensive to break the polymer down into its chemical parts, says Dennis Sabourin, executive director of the National Association for PET Container Resources, a trade organization. There are two existing methods for accomplishing the chemical reaction, says Sabourin, but they are "very energy-intensive and have been abandoned because of the cost." Even with the use of existing catalysts to help the recycling reactions along, these processes must be done at high temperatures and under great pressure, and take a long time. If the new catalysts have "even a modicum of success, it would be big news," Sabourin says.

The IBM and Stanford researchers, who described their work today in the journal Macromolecules, have developed several new catalysts, one of which can be used to chemically recycle PET in a short time at 75 ºC. PET is made from two feedstocks, one of them an organic acid, the other ethylene glycol, which is relatively inexpensive. The catalyst works in an ethylene glycol solution. When cut up water bottles are placed in the solution, the catalyst causes the organic acid in the plastic to react with the ethylene glycol in solution to make PET that is of the same quality used to make the bottle initially.

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The new catalysts are a result of a decade-long research project at IBM to develop better ways to make the polymers used as an insulating layer in computer chips. These layers are traditionally prepared using catalysts that contain metal. Metallic catalysts are highly active, but they're difficult to remove once the reaction is done, leaving small impurities that can nonetheless interfere with a chip's performance. These metal impurities can also leach out, becoming an environmental pollutant when the chip is trashed at the end of its lifetime. "To remove that catalyst is cost-prohibitive, so we started looking for a new way to make polymers," says James Hedrick, lead scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, CA.

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mkogrady

423 Comments

  • 697 Days Ago
  • 03/09/2010

Can you clarify

Katherine Bourzac - the article states PET is not reused for new bottles or containers, but can the discarded plastic be remelted and then formed into a non-food related product such as green house panels, or non food application like giant bio reactors for algae farms.

If the plastic is damaged by UV rays, then periodically replacing them and remelting the old PET may offer some means to keep continuous recycling.

A simple argument may be that "X amount" of petroleum is used in making "Y number or pounds" of PET, so anything we can do to reuse this stuff makes financial sense.

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aunderdown

77 Comments

  • 697 Days Ago
  • 03/09/2010

De-polymerization and re-polymerization - one or two steps?

This was a really interesting article. This type of catalyst, modeling biological processes, will transform the chemical and synthetic materials industries, making them less energy intensive and less dependent on non-renewable feedstocks. There were a couple of items in the article, however, that got me a bit confused.

The article states:

"The Stanford and IBM researchers guessed that a similar organic small molecule might be good at catalyzing reactions that string esters together to make long polymers."

(i.e., polymerization) But the article also states:

"the company has also had good results using its organic catalysts to depolymerize PET to make specialized materials such as feedstocks...."

So, are there one or two catalysts involved in the process? (one for de- and one for re-polymerization)

Also:  "The catalyst works in an ethylene glycol solution. When cut up water bottles are placed in the solution, the catalyst causes the organic acid in the plastic to react with the ethylene glycol in solution to make PET that is of the same quality used to make the bottle initially."

It sounds like the organic acid (which is terephthalic acid (TPA)) is released from the PET (by catalyst induced de-polymerization) and is re-polymerized with ethylene glycol to form new PET in the same reactor. This seems like a messy business. How can the same catalyst work for both de-polymerization and re-polymerization? Is it possible that a two-step process is used, i.e., that they separate the TPA from the solution and purify it, prior to re-polymerizing? To produce a “like new” polymer, they would want to control the molecular weight distribution of the new polymer carefully and reformulate with a new package of additives. I expect that it would be difficult to control the polymerization reaction precisely when you are depolymerizing in the same reaction vessel. They would also want to avoid any contamination from the original additives or any degradation products in the original polymer.

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