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"Like Recycles Like": Selective Ring-Closing Depolymerization of Poly(L-Lactic Acid) to L-Lactide.

Linnea CederholmJakob WohlertPeter OlsénMinna HakkarainenKarin Odelius
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Chemical recycling of poly(L-lactic acid) to the cyclic monomer L-lactide is hampered by low selectivity and by epimerization and elimination reactions, impeding its use on a large scale. The high number of side reactions originates from the high ceiling temperature (T c ) of L-lactide, which necessitates high temperatures or multistep reactions to achieve recycling to L-lactide. To circumvent this issue, we utilized the impact of solvent interactions on the monomer-polymer equilibrium to decrease the T c of L-lactide. Analyzing the observed T c in different solvents in relation to their Hildebrand solubility parameter revealed a "like recycles like" relationship. The decreased T c , obtained by selecting solvents that interact strongly with the monomer (dimethyl formamide or the green solvent γ-valerolactone), allowed chemical recycling of high-molecular-weight poly(L-lactic acid) directly to L-lactide, within 1-4 h at 140 °C, with >95 % conversion and 98-99 % selectivity. Recycled L-lactide was isolated and repolymerized with high control over molecular weight and dispersity, closing the polymer loop.
Keyphrases
  • lactic acid
  • ionic liquid
  • transcription factor
  • mass spectrometry
  • simultaneous determination
  • structural basis