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Chemically recyclable polyvinyl chloride-like plastics

Chemistry

Chemically recyclable polyvinyl chloride-like plastics

X. Zhang, X. Feng, et al.

Discover the innovative work by Xun Zhang, Ximin Feng, Wenqi Guo, Chengjian Zhang, and Xinghong Zhang on developing PVC-like plastics that can be recycled back into their original monomers. This breakthrough supports a circular plastic economy with high-efficiency synthesis, mechanical properties akin to PVC, and superior recyclability.... show more
Abstract
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is the world's third-most widely manufactured thermoplastic, but has the lowest recycling rate. The development of PVC-like plastics that can be depolymerized back to monomer contributes to a circular plastic economy, but has not been accessed. Here, we develop a series of chemically recyclable plastics from the reversible copolymerization of cyclic anhydride with chloral. The copolymerization is highly efficient through the anionic or cationic mechanism under mild conditions, yielding polyesters with tunable structure and properties from multiple commercial monomers. Notably, these polyesters manifest mechanical properties comparable to PVC and polystyrene. Meanwhile, such polyesters are flame-retardant like PVC due to high chloride content. Of significance, these polyesters can be depolymerized back to starting monomers at high temperatures owing to the reversibility of the copolymerization, leading to a circular economy. Overall, the readily available monomers, simple synthesis, advantageous performance, and practical recyclability make the polymers promising for applications.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 02, 2024
Authors
Xun Zhang, Ximin Feng, Wenqi Guo, Chengjian Zhang, Xinghong Zhang
Tags
Polyvinyl chloride
recyclable plastics
circular economy
depolymerization
polyesters
sustainable materials
copolymerization
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