AI Article Synopsis

  • Polymer chemical recycling of carbon dioxide-derived polycarbonates can produce valuable products like epoxides, contributing to a circular plastic economy.
  • A series of dinuclear catalysts (Mg(II)M(II)) were tested, with Mg(II)Co(II) showing the best activity, achieving over 99% selectivity for cyclohexene oxide.
  • The study reveals insights into the mechanisms of catalyst performance and suggests prioritizing these catalysts for recycling other oxygenated polymers, advancing the understanding of catalyst design for efficient recycling processes.

Article Abstract

Polymer chemical recycling to monomers (CRM) is important to help achieve a circular plastic economy, but the "rules" governing catalyst design for such processes remain unclear. Here, carbon dioxide-derived polycarbonates undergo CRM to produce epoxides and carbon dioxide. A series of dinuclear catalysts, Mg(II)M(II) where M(II) = Mg, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, and Zn, are compared for poly(cyclohexene carbonate) depolymerizations. The recycling is conducted in the solid state, at 140 °C monitored using thermal gravimetric analyses, or performed at larger-scale using laboratory glassware. The most active catalysts are, in order of decreasing rate, Mg(II)Co(II), Mg(II)Ni(II), and Mg(II)Zn(II), with the highest activity reaching 8100 h and with >99% selectivity for cyclohexene oxide. Both the activity and selectivity values are the highest yet reported in this field, and the catalysts operate at low loadings and moderate temperatures (from 1:300 to 1:5000, 140 °C). For the best heterodinuclear catalysts, the depolymerization kinetics and activation barriers are determined. The rates in both reverse depolymerization and forward CHO/CO polymerization catalysis show broadly similar trends, but the processes feature different intermediates; forward polymerization depends upon a metal-carbonate intermediate, while reverse depolymerization depends upon a metal-alkoxide intermediate. These dinuclear catalysts are attractive for the chemical recycling of carbon dioxide-derived plastics and should be prioritized for recycling of other oxygenated polymers and copolymers, including polyesters and polyethers. This work provides insights into the factors controlling depolymerization catalysis and steers future recycling catalyst design toward exploitation of lightweight and abundant s-block metals, such as Mg(II).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10728899PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.3c04208DOI Listing

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