Litcius/Paper detail

Low-temperature dechlorination of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) for production of H <sub>2</sub> and carbon materials using liquid metal catalysts

Felipe Polo‐Garzon, Zili Wu, Yuanyuan Li, Junyan Zhang, Xinbin Yu, Elena Toups, Eddie López‐Honorato, Joshua T. Damron, Jeffrey C. Foster, Yongqiang Cheng, Luke L. Daemen, Anibal J. Ramirez‐Cuesta, Harry M. Meyer

2024Science Advances28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is ubiquitous in everyday life; however, it is not recycled because it degrades uncontrollably into toxic products above 250°C. Therefore, it is of interest to controllably dechlorinate PVC at mild temperatures to generate narrowly distributed carbon materials. We present a catalytic route to dechlorinate PVC (~90% reduction of Cl content) at mild temperature (200°C) to produce gas H 2 (with negligible coproduction of corrosive gas HCl) and carbon materials using Ga as a liquid metal (LM) catalyst. A LM was used to promote intimate contact between PVC and the catalytic sites. During dechlorination of PVC, Cl is sequestrated in the carbonaceous solid product. Later, chlorine is easily removed with an acetone wash at room temperature. The Ga LM catalyst is reusable, outperforms a traditional supported metal catalyst, and successfully converts (untreated) discarded PVC pipe.

Topics & Concepts

Polyvinyl chlorideCatalysisCarbon fibersMetalMaterials scienceChlorideChemical engineeringChemistryOrganic chemistryComposite materialComposite numberEngineeringEnvironmental remediation with nanomaterialsNanomaterials for catalytic reactionsCatalytic Processes in Materials Science