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Plastics-to-syngas photocatalysed by Co–Ga2O3 nanosheets
Summary
Researchers developed a solar-powered photocatalytic method using cobalt-gallium oxide nanosheets to convert non-recyclable plastic bags into renewable syngas at ambient conditions, simultaneously addressing plastic pollution and energy production.
Plastics take hundreds of years to degrade naturally, while their chemical degradation typically requires high temperature and pressure. Here, we first utilize solar energy to realize the sustainable and efficient plastic-to-syngas conversion with the aid of water at ambient conditions. As an example, the commercial plastic bags could be efficiently photoconverted into renewable syngas by Co-Ga<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub> nanosheets, with hydrogen and carbon monoxide formation rates of 647.8 and 158.3 μmol g<sup>-1</sup> h<sup>-1</sup>. <i>In situ</i> characterizations and labelling experiments unveil water is photoreduced into hydrogen, while non-recyclable plastics including polyethylene bags, polypropylene boxes and polyethylene terephthalate bottles are photodegraded into carbon dioxide, which is further selectively photoreduced into carbon monoxide. In-depth investigation illustrates that the efficiency of syngas production mainly depends on the carbon dioxide reduction process and hence photocatalysts of high carbon dioxide reduction activity should be designed to promote the efficiency of plastic-to-syngas conversion in the future. The concept for the photoreforming of non-recyclable plastics into renewable syngas helps to eradicate 'white pollution' and alleviate the energy crisis simultaneously.
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