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Sustainable Conversion of Microplastics to Methane with Ultrahigh Selectivity by a Biotic-Abiotic Hybrid Photocatalytic System.

Jie YeYiping ChenChao GaoChao WangAndong HuGuowen DongZhi ChenShungui ZhouYujie Xiong
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Efficient conversion of microplastics into fuels provides a promising strategy to alleviate environmental pollution and the energy crisis. However, the conventional processes are challenged by low product selectivity and potential secondary pollution. Herein, a biotic-abiotic photocatalytic system is designed by assembling Methanosarcina barkeri (M. b) and carbon dot-functionalized polymeric carbon nitrides (CDPCN), by which biodegradable microplastics-poly(lactic acid) after heat pretreatment can be converted into CH 4 for five successive 24-day cycles with nearly 100 % CH 4 selectivity by the assistance of additional CO 2 . Mechanistic analyses showed that both photooxidation and photoreduction methanogenesis worked simultaneously via the fully utilizing photogenerated holes and electrons without chemical sacrificial quenchers. Further research validated the real-world applicability of M. b-CDPCN for non-biodegradable microplastic-to-CH 4 conversion, offering a new avenue for engineering the plastic reuse.
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