Using sunlight to recycle black plastics: Researchers leverage additive to make materials chemically useful

Not all plastics are equal — some types and colors are easier to recycle than others. Black foam and black coffee lids, which are often made of polystyrene, usually end up in landfills because color additives lead to ineffective sorting. Now, researchers report the ability to leverage one additive in black plastics, with the help of sunlight or white LEDs, to convert black and colored polystyrene waste into reusable starting materials.

“Simple, visible light irradiation holds the potential to transform the chemical recycling of plastics, using the additives already found in many commercial products,” say the paper’s authors, Sewon Oh, doctoral candidate in chemistry and chemical biology; Liat Kugelmass, M.S. ’21, Ph.D. ’23; and corresponding author Erin Stache and Hanning Jiang, both at Princeton.

Their paper, “Recycling of Post-Consumer Waste Polystyrene Using Commercial Plastic Additives,” published Nov. 25 in ACS Central Science.

An emerging strategy for plastic recycling involves using light to help break down plastic into chemically useful materials that can be recycled into new products. This process requires a helper compound to convert light into the heat needed to break apart polymer bonds. However, finding the right helper that won’t create more waste and is easily incorporated into recycled materials remains a challenge for researchers. Seeking to create a circular economy for plastic recycling, the team of researchers took advantage of something already found in black polystyrene waste — an additive known as carbon black.

The researchers tested a method to recycle lab-made black polystyrene: They ground a mixture of polystyrene and carbon black to a fine powder, placed the powder in a sealed glass vial and then set the vial under high-intensity white LEDs for 30 minutes. The carbon black converted the LED light into heat. The heat then broke apart the polystyrene’s molecular structure, creating a mixture of shorter one-, two- and three-styrene units. And these three components cleanly separated within the reaction apparatus. In experiments, the team recycled the leftover carbon black and styrene monomer into polystyrene, demonstrating the circularity of the new method.

Applying the technique to post-consumer black plastic from food containers and coffee cup lids, the researchers cut the waste into small pieces and found that up to 53% of the polystyrene converted to styrene monomer. Waste samples contaminated with canola oil, soy sauce and orange juice broke down slightly less efficiently. When the researchers switched the light source from LEDs to focused sunlight outdoors, they observed a higher reaction efficiency (80%). Additionally, a multicolored mixture of black, yellow, red and colorless polystyrene waste converted to styrene in sunlit conditions at a higher rate (67%) compared to white LEDs (45%). The researchers attribute the higher efficiencies to the greater light intensity achieved by focused sunlight. By demonstrating sunlight’s ability to break down colored polystyrene waste, the researchers say that their method could create a closed-loop recycling process for this type of plastic.

The authors received funding from Cornell University and Princeton University as well as a Catalysis Science Early Career award from the U.S. Department of Energy.
 

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		A glass vial sits in a patch of sunlight on a square tiled floor, with shadow around it.
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