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Pyrolysis–catalysis upcycling of waste plastic using a multilayer stainless-steel catalyst toward a circular economy

Journal of Chest Surgery 2023 83 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Qingyu Liu, Dongyang Jiang, Hui Zhou, Xiangzhou Yuan, Chunfei Wu, Changsong Hu, Rafael Luque, Shurong Wang, Sheng Chu, Rui Xiao, Huiyan Zhang

Summary

This study demonstrated pyrolysis-catalysis of waste plastics using a multilayer stainless-steel mesh catalyst to produce multi-walled carbon nanotubes and hydrogen, achieving carbon and hydrogen recovery efficiencies of 86% and 70%, respectively. The catalyst maintained performance over ten cycles and showed broad applicability across different plastic types, offering a promising alternative to incineration.

Current un-sustainable plastic management is exacerbating plastic pollution, an urgent shift is thus needed to create a recycling society. Such recovering carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) from waste plastic has been considered as one practical route to achieve a circular economy. Here, we performed a simple pyrolysis-catalysis deconstruction of waste plastic via a monolithic multilayer stainless-steel mesh catalyst to produce multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) and H2, which are important carbon material and energy carrier to achieve sustainable development. Results revealed that the C and H recovery efficiencies were as high as 86% and 70%, respectively. The unique oxidation-reduction process and improvement of surface roughness led to efficient exposure of active sites, which increased MWCNTs by suppressing macromolecule hydrocarbons. The C recovery efficiency declined by only 5% after 10 cycles, proving the long-term employment of the catalyst. This catalyst can efficiently convert aromatics to MWCNTs by the vapor-solid-solid mechanism and demonstrate good universality in processing different kinds of waste plastics. The produced MWCNTs showed potential in applications of lithium-ion batteries and telecommunication. Owing to the economic profits and environmental benefits of the developed route, we highlighted its potential as a promising alternative to conventional incineration, simultaneously achieving the waste-to-resource strategy and circular economy.

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