Low-temperature upcycling of polyolefins into liquid alkanes via tandem cracking-alkylation.
Wei ZhangSung Min KimLennart WahlRachit KhareLillian HaleJian Zhi HuDonald M CamaioniOliver Y GutiérrezYue LiuJohannes A LercherPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
Selective upcycling of polyolefin waste has been hampered by the relatively high temperatures that are required to cleave the carbon-carbon (C-C) bonds at reasonably high rates. We present a distinctive approach that uses a highly ionic reaction environment to increase the polymer reactivity and lower the energy of ionic transition states. Combining endothermic cleavage of the polymer C-C bonds with exothermic alkylation reactions of the cracking products enables full conversion of polyethylene and polypropylene to liquid isoalkanes (C 6 to C 10 ) at temperatures below 100°C. Both reactions are catalyzed by a Lewis acidic species that is generated in a chloroaluminate ionic liquid. The alkylate product forms a separate phase and is easily separated from the reactant catalyst mixture. The process can convert unprocessed postconsumer items to high-quality liquid alkanes with high yields.