AI Article Synopsis

  • A new processing strategy called solvent-targeted recovery and precipitation (STRAP) effectively breaks down multilayer plastic packaging into its individual resins using selective solvent dissolution based on thermodynamic principles.
  • The study compared two methods of polymer precipitation—one using antisolvents (STRAP-A) and the other relying on temperature changes (STRAP-B)—both achieving nearly 100% material efficiency for a mix of polyethylene, ethylene vinyl alcohol, and polyethylene terephthalate.
  • A technoeconomic analysis revealed that STRAP-B could lower the minimum selling price of recycled resins by 21% compared to STRAP-A, showcasing this method's potential for being more economical and environmentally friendly, with flexible application across different plastic compositions.

Article Abstract

The recently reported processing strategy called solvent-targeted recovery and precipitation (STRAP) enables deconstruction of multilayer plastic packaging films into their constituent resins by selective dissolution. It uses a series of solvent washes that are guided by thermodynamic calculations of polymer solubility. In this work, the use of antisolvents in the STRAP process was reduced and solvent mixtures were considered to enable the temperature-controlled dissolution and precipitation of the target polymers in multilayer films. This was considered as a means to further improve the STRAP process and its estimated costs. Two STRAP approaches were compared based on different polymer precipitation techniques: precipitation by the addition of an antisolvent (STRAP-A) and precipitation by decreasing the solvent temperature (STRAP-B). Both approaches were able to separate the constituent polymers in a post-industrial film composed primarily of polyethylene (PE), ethylene vinyl alcohol (EVOH), and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) with near 100 % material efficiency. Technoeconomic analysis indicates that the minimum selling price (MSP) of the recycled resins with STRAP-B is 21.0 % lower than that achieved with STRAP-A. This provides evidence that thermally driven polymer precipitation is an option to reduce the use of antisolvents, making the STRAP process more economically and environmentally attractive. A third process, STRAP-C, was demonstrated with another post-industrial multilayer film of a different composition. The results demonstrate that this process can also recover polymers at similar costs to those of virgin resins, indicating that the STRAP technology is flexible and can remain economically competitive as the plastic feed complexity is increased.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cssc.202101128DOI Listing

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