TY - UNPB
T1 - Photo-Initiated Depolymerization of Consumer Poly(methyl methacrylate): Chlorine Not Required
AU - Husband, Jon
AU - Irvine, Gavin
AU - Morris, Callum
AU - Folli, Andrea
AU - Davidson, Matthew
AU - Freakley, Simon
PY - 2025/6/11
Y1 - 2025/6/11
N2 - The chemical recycling of commodity acrylic polymers, such as the transparent thermoplastic polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), typically requires temperatures of 350–400°C. Herein, we report chemical recycling back to monomers for PMMA between 120–180°C, through UV illumination under oxygen-free conditions. We have achieved gram-scale degradation of consumer plastic with > 95% conversion, yielding > 70% monomer, which can be readily repolymerized. The process proceeds even at high concentrations (> 1 M) and depends strongly on solvent choice: aromatic solvents like dichlorobenzene and diphenyl ether maximize conversion. In contrast to a concurrently published study, we report that chlorine radicals are not required for depolymerization; however, when present, they react with the unzipping chain to form chlorine-functionalized PMMA which can be upcycled through derivatization. In more sustainable non-chlorinated solvents such as benzonitrile, minimal termination by radicals enables complete unzipping. These findings demonstrate a low-temperature, scalable route for the chemical recycling of PMMA, offering new pathways for plastic circularity.
AB - The chemical recycling of commodity acrylic polymers, such as the transparent thermoplastic polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), typically requires temperatures of 350–400°C. Herein, we report chemical recycling back to monomers for PMMA between 120–180°C, through UV illumination under oxygen-free conditions. We have achieved gram-scale degradation of consumer plastic with > 95% conversion, yielding > 70% monomer, which can be readily repolymerized. The process proceeds even at high concentrations (> 1 M) and depends strongly on solvent choice: aromatic solvents like dichlorobenzene and diphenyl ether maximize conversion. In contrast to a concurrently published study, we report that chlorine radicals are not required for depolymerization; however, when present, they react with the unzipping chain to form chlorine-functionalized PMMA which can be upcycled through derivatization. In more sustainable non-chlorinated solvents such as benzonitrile, minimal termination by radicals enables complete unzipping. These findings demonstrate a low-temperature, scalable route for the chemical recycling of PMMA, offering new pathways for plastic circularity.
U2 - 10.21203/rs.3.rs-6548357/v1
DO - 10.21203/rs.3.rs-6548357/v1
M3 - Preprint
BT - Photo-Initiated Depolymerization of Consumer Poly(methyl methacrylate): Chlorine Not Required
PB - Research Square
ER -