Chemical & Engineering News | 2019

Adding value to reclaimed PET

 

Abstract


About 30% of the 26 million metric tons of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) produced each year gets fashioned into single-use beverage bottles. But according to a report from the National Association for PET Container Resources and the Association of Plastic Recyclers, only 18% of that material has a second life after recycling—the rest ends up in landfills. The problem, in part, is that the properties of recycled PET just aren’t as good as those of the virgin polymer. Looking for a way to add value to reclaimed PET, Gregg T. Beckham and colleagues at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory have devised a way to transform it into useful composites by combining it with biobased chemicals (Joule 2019, DOI: 10.1016/j.joule.2019.01.018). The scientists first deconstructed the reclaimed PET and glycolized it with linear diols. They then reacted the resulting material with renewable monomers to create either unsaturated polyesters or diacrylic polymers. These polymers

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1021/cen-09709-scicon8
Language English
Journal Chemical & Engineering News

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