Abstract
Petroleum-derived polyolefins exhibit diverse properties and are the most important and largest volume class of plastics. However, polyolefins are difficult to efficiently recycle or break down and are now a persistent global contaminant. Broadly replacing polyolefins with bio-derived and degradable polyethylene-like materials is an important yet challenging endeavour towards sustainable plastics. Here we report a solution for circular bio-based polyethylene-like materials synthesized by acceptorless dehydrogenative polymerization from linear and branched diols and their catalytic closed-loop recycling. The polymerization and depolymerization processes utilize earth-abundant manganese complexes as catalysts. These materials exhibit a wide range of mechanical properties, encompassing thermoplastics to plastomers to elastomers. The branched diols, produced through a thiol-ene click reaction, can be polymerized to plastics with significantly enhanced tensile properties, toughness and adhesive properties. These materials could be depolymerized back to monomers through hydrogenation and were separatable with a monomer recovery of up to 99%, unaffected by the presence of dyes and additives. Overall, this system establishes a route to more sustainable plastics.
Original language | American English |
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Pages (from-to) | 500-506 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Nature Chemistry |
Volume | 17 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2025 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/JA-2800-90548
Keywords
- depolymerization
- polymerization
- polyolefins
- recycling