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Process Analysis of PMMA Dental Waste Depolymerization in Semi-Batch Reactors

Journal of Materials Science 2025
Armando Ferreira, Haroldo Jorge da Silva Ribeiro, Marcelo Costa Santos, Caio Campos Ferreira, Fernanda Paula da Costa Assunção, Sérgio Duvoisin, Luiz Eduardo Pizarro Borges, Nélio Teixeira Machado, Lucas Pinto Bernar

Summary

This study examined the pyrolysis of PMMA dental waste in semi-batch reactors to recover the valuable monomer methyl methacrylate (MMA), finding that lower temperatures (around 425°C) and controlled heating rates maximize MMA yield, while higher temperatures and larger reactor scales increase thermal cracking and reduce monomer purity.

Polymers

This study examines the chemical recycling of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) dental waste in semi-batch fixed-bed reactors via pyrolysis, aiming to convert this waste into the valuable monomer methyl methacrylate (MMA). First, the effect of temperature is analyzed in a laboratory-scale (30 g) semi-batch reactor at 350, 400 and 450 °C. In order to visualize the combined effect of temperature and increase in bed volume, experiments conducted at 350 °C in the laboratory (30 g) and on a pilot scale (20 kg) are compared. Experiments conducted at 475°C on technical and pilot scales are also compared to elucidate this behavior. A detailed process analysis is presented, considering different experiments conducted in a semi-batch technical-scale reactor. Experiments were conducted in a 2 L reactor at temperatures of 425 °C, 450 °C and 475 °C to understand the effects of heating rate and temperature on product yield and composition. The results show that at 425 °C, MMA was the primary liquid component, with minimal by-products, suggesting that lower temperatures enhance monomer recovery. Higher temperatures, however, increased gas yields and reduced MMA yield due to intensified thermal cracking. This study also highlights that char formation and non-condensable gases increase with the reactor scale, indicating that heat transfer limitations can influence MMA purity and yield. These findings emphasize that for effective MMA recovery, lower temperatures and controlled heating rates are optimal, especially in larger reactors where heat transfer issues are more prominent. This research study contributes to scaling up PMMA recycling processes, supporting industrial applications to achieve efficient monomer recovery from waste.

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