New Catalyst Completely Breaks Down Durable Plastic Pollution in Minutes

New Process Recovers 99% of Monomers

New process recovers 99% of monomers (shown here), nylon’s building blocks. After recovering monomers, industry can upcycle nylon into higher-value products. Credit: Northwestern University

Fishing nets, carpets, and clothing decompose without producing harmful byproducts.

Many people are familiar of the disturbing scenes of marine creatures, such as sea turtles, dolphins, and seals, ensnared in discarded fishing nets.

The main issue behind Nylon-6, a plastic found in these nets as well as in carpets and garments, is its excessive strength and durability, preventing it from naturally decomposing. Consequently, when it enters the environment, it lingers for thousands of years, polluting water bodies, damaging coral reefs, and endangering birds and marine animals.

Now, Northwestern University chemists have developed a new catalyst that quickly, cleanly, and completely breaks down Nylon-6 in a matter of minutes — without generating harmful byproducts. Even better: The process does not require toxic solvents, expensive materials, or extreme conditions, making it practical for everyday applications.

Not only could this new catalyst play an important role in environmental remediation, it also could perform the first step in upcycling Nylon-6 wastes into higher-value products.


Watch the catalyst work to degrade a 1-gram sample of Nylon-6. Credit: Northwestern University

The research was recently published in the journal Chem.

“The whole world is aware of the plastic problem,” said Northwestern’s Tobin Marks, the study’s senior author. “Plastic is a part of our society; we use so much of it. But the problem is: What do we do when we’re finished with it? Ideally, we wouldn’t burn it or put it into landfills. We would recycle it. We’re developing catalysts that deconstruct these polymers, returning them to their original form, so they can be reused.”

Marks is the Charles E. and Emma H. Morrison Professor of Chemistry and Vladimir N. Ipatieff Professor of Catalytic Chemistry at Northwestern’s Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and a professor of materials science and engineering at Northwestern’s McCormick School of Engineering. He also is a faculty affiliate at the Paula M. Trienens Institute for Sustainability and Energy. Northwestern co-authors include Linda J. Broadbelt, the Sarah Rebecca Roland Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering and senior associate dean of McCormick, and Yosi Kratish, a research assistant professor in Marks’ group.

A deadly difficulty

From clothing to carpets to seat belts, Nylon-6 is found in a variety of materials that most people use every day. But, when people are done with these materials, they end up in landfills or worse: loose in the environment, including the ocean. According to the World Wildlife Federation, up to 1 million pounds of fishing gear is abandoned in the ocean each year, with fishing nets composed of Nylon-6 making up at least 46% of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

A Sea Turtle Entangled in an Abandoned Fishing Net

A sea turtle entangled in an abandoned fishing net. Credit: NOAA

“Fishing nets lose quality after a couple of years of use,” said Liwei Ye, the paper’s lead first author who is a postdoctoral fellow in Marks’ laboratory. “They become so water-logged that it’s difficult to pull them out of the ocean. And they are so cheap to replace that people just leave them in the water and buy new ones.”

“There is a lot of garbage in the ocean,” Marks added. “Cardboard and food waste biodegrades. Metals sink to the bottom. Then we are left with the plastics.”

The greenest solvent is no solvent

Current methods to dispose of Nylon-6 are limited to simply burying it in landfills. When Nylon-6 is burned, it emits toxic pollutants such as nitrogen oxides, which are linked to various health complications including premature death, or carbon dioxide, an infamously potent greenhouse gas.

Although other laboratories have explored catalysts to degrade Nylon-6, those catalysts require extreme conditions (such as temperatures as high as 350 degrees Celsius), high-pressure steam (which is energetically expensive and inefficient), and/or toxic solvents that only contribute to more pollution.

“You can dissolve plastics in acid, but then you are left with dirty water,” Marks said. “What do you do with that? The goal is always to use a green solvent. And what type of solvent is greener than no solvent at all?”

New Catalyst Degrades Nylon 6 Sample Within Minutes

The new catalyst degrades Nylon-6 sample within minutes. Credit: Northwestern University

Recovering building blocks for upcycling

To bypass these issues, the researchers looked to a novel catalyst already developed in Marks’ laboratory. The catalyst harnesses yttrium (an inexpensive Earth-abundant metal) and lanthanide ions. When the team heated Nylon-6 samples to melting temperatures and applied the catalyst without a solvent, the plastic fell apart — reverting to its original building blocks without leaving byproducts behind.

“You can think of a polymer like a necklace or a string of pearls,” Marks explained. “In this analogy, each pearl is a monomer. These monomers are the building blocks. We devised a way to break down the necklace but recover those pearls.”

In experiments, Marks and his team were able to recover 99% of plastics’ original monomers. In principle, those monomers could then be upcycled into higher-value products, which are currently in high demand for their strength and durability.

“Recycled nylon is actually worth more money than regular nylon,” Marks said. “Many high-end fashion brands use recycled nylon in clothes.”

Efficiently targeting Nylon-6

In addition to recovering a high yield of monomers, the catalyst is highly selective — acting only on the Nylon-6 polymers without disrupting surrounding materials. This means the industry could apply the catalyst to large volumes of unsorted waste and selectively target Nylon-6.

“If you don’t have a catalyst that’s selective, then how do you separate the nylon from the rest of the waste?” Marks said. “You would need to hire humans to sort through all the waste to remove the nylon. That’s enormously expensive and inefficient. But if the catalyst only degrades the nylon and leaves everything else behind, that’s incredibly efficient.”

Recycling these monomers also avoids the need to produce more plastics from scratch.

“These monomers are produced from crude oil, so they have a huge carbon footprint,” Ye said. “That’s just not sustainable.”

What’s next?

After filing a patent for the new process, Marks and his team have already received interest from potential industrial partners. They hope others can use their catalysts on a large scale to help solve the global plastic problem.

“Our research represents a significant step forward in the field of polymer recycling and sustainable materials management,” Ye said. “The innovative approach addresses a critical gap in current recycling technologies, offering a practical and efficient solution for the nylon waste problem. We believe it has implications for reducing the environmental footprint of plastics and contributing to a circular economy.”

Reference: “Catalyst metal-ligand design for rapid, selective, and solventless depolymerization of Nylon-6 plastics” by Liwei Ye, Xiaoyang Liu, Kristen B. Beckett, Jacob O. Rothbaum, Clarissa Lincoln, Linda J. Broadbelt, Yosi Kratish and Tobin J. Marks, 30 November 2023, Chem.
DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2023.10.022

The study was supported by RePLACE (Redesigning Polymers to Leverage A Circular Economy), funded by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy (award numbers SC0022290 and DE-FG02-03ER15457) and the National Science Foundation (grant number CHE-1856619). Additional support came from the Institute for Catalysis in Energy Processes, which is a major research project within the Center for Catalysis and Surface Science at the Paula M. Trienens Institute for Sustainability and Energy.

2 Comments on "New Catalyst Completely Breaks Down Durable Plastic Pollution in Minutes"

  1. I guess we’ll know this works when we see some impact some day. If that happens, I wonder if inexpensive ytterbium could rise in price after the catalyst turns out to be greatly valued.

  2. “The whole world is aware of the plastic problem,” said Northwestern’s Tobin Marks, the study’s senior author.
    Yes.
    The whole world is aware of the problem of academic fraud too.
    We’ll see…

    FJB

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