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Degradation of Decabromodiphenyl Ether Dispersed in Poly (Acrylo-Butadiene-Styrene) Using a Rotatory Laboratory Pilot Under UV-Visible Irradiation

Materials Today Communications 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Rachida Khadidja Benmammar, Zohra Bouberka, Christian Malas, Yvain Carpentier, Kawssar Mujtaba Haider, Venkateswara Rao Mundlapati, Michaël Ziskind, Cristian Focşa, Skander Khelifi, Franck Poutch, Fouad Laoutid, Philippe Supiot, Corinne Foissac, Ulrich Maschke

Summary

This research examines how decabromodiphenyl ether (DBDE), a widely used brominated flame retardant, degrades when dispersed within acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) plastic under thermal or environmental stress. Understanding this degradation pathway is important because breakdown products of DBDE can be more toxic and mobile than the parent compound, posing risks during plastic recycling and end-of-life disposal. The findings have implications for the safe handling and recycling of flame-retardant plastics.

The growing volume of plastics derived from electronic waste (e-waste) underscores the imperative for environmentally sustainable strategies for the management of this waste. In light of the paramount importance of this issue, a pilot demonstrator for the decontamination of polymers containing Brominated Flame Retardants (BFRs) has been developed. The objective is to investigate the potential for decontaminating BFR-containing polymers from e-waste via UV-visible irradiation using a rotatory laboratory pilot operating under primary vacuum conditions. This report focuses on binary model blends composed of 90 weight% (wt%) poly(Acrylo-Butadiene-Styrene) (ABS) pellets and 10 wt% Deca-Bromo-Diphenyl Ether (DBDE), which is one of the most toxic BFRs. The efficiency of the irradiation process was evaluated as a function of pellet diameter and irradiation time using Fourier Transform InfraRed spectroscopy (FTIR) and High-Resolution Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectroscopy (HR-LDI-MS). As a consequence, ABS + DBDE achieved a decontamination efficiency of 97% when irradiated with pellets of less than 1 mm in diameter for a period of 4 h. Additionally, the thermal behavior of the irradiated samples was investigated through thermogravimetric analysis and differential scanning calorimetry. It was thus established that the application of UV-visible irradiation had no significant impact on the overall thermal properties of ABS.

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