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Corrosion Engineering of Part-Per-Million Single Atom Pt 1 /Ni(OH) 2 Electrocatalyst for PET Upcycling at Ampere-Level Current Density.

Minwei SongYufeng WuZiyi ZhaoMengting ZhengChanglong WangJun Lu
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2024)
The plastic waste issue has posed a series of formidable challenges for the ecological environment and human health. While conventional recycling strategies often lead to plastic down-cycling, the electrochemical strategy of recovering valuable monomers enables an ideal, circular plastic economy. Here a corrosion synthesized single atom Pt 1 /Ni(OH) 2 electrocatalyst with part-per-million noble Pt loading for highly efficient and selective upcycling of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) into valuable chemicals (potassium diformate and terephthalic acid) and green hydrogen is reported. Electro-oxidation of PET hydrolysate, ethylene glycol (EG), to formate is processed with high Faraday efficiency (FE) and selectivity (>90%) at the current density close to 1000 mA cm -2 (1.444 V vs RHE). The in situ spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations provide insights into the mechanism and the understanding of the high efficiency. Remarkably, the electro-oxidation of EG at the ampere-level current density is also successfully illustrated by using a membrane-electrode assembly with high FEs to formate integrated with hydrogen production for 500 h of continuous operation. This process allows valuable chemical production at high space-time yield and is highly profitable (588-700 $ ton -1 PET), showing an industrial perspective on single-atom catalysis of electrochemical plastic upcycling.
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