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Breakthrough in polyurethane bio-recycling: An efficient laccase-mediated system for the degradation of different types of polyurethanes

Waste Management 2021 70 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Audrey Magnin, Audrey Magnin, Audrey Magnin, Audrey Magnin, Lisa Entzmann, Lisa Entzmann, Luc Avérous, Luc Avérous, Éric Pollet Éric Pollet Luc Avérous, Luc Avérous, Luc Avérous, Luc Avérous, Éric Pollet Éric Pollet

Summary

A laccase-mediated enzymatic system efficiently degraded multiple types of polyurethane plastics in aqueous solution at mild conditions, breaking polymer chains and reducing molecular weight within days, offering a green biotechnology approach to managing polyurethane waste that conventional recycling and chemical degradation struggle to address.

Development of green, efficient and profitable recycling processes for plastic material will contribute to reduce the expanding plastic pollution and microplastics accumulation in the environment. Polyurethanes (PU) are versatile polymers with a large range of chemical compositions and structures. This variability increases the complexity of PU waste management. Biological recycling researchers have recently demonstrated great interest in polyethylene terephthalate. The adaptation of this route towards producing polyurethanes requires the discovery of enzymes that are able to depolymerize a large variety of PU. A laccase mediated system (LMS) was tested on four representative PU models, with different structures (foams and thermoplastics), and chemical compositions (polyester- and polyether-based PU). Size exclusion chromatography was performed on the thermoplastics and this revealed a significant reduction in the molar masses after 18 days of incubation at 37 °C. Degradation of foams under the same conditions was demonstrated by microscopy and compression assay for both polyester- and polyether-based PU. This study represents a major breakthrough in PU degradation, as it is the first time that enzymatic degradation has been clearly demonstrated on a polyether-based PU foam. This work is a step forward in the development of a sustainable recycling pathway, adapted to a large variety of PU materials.

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