4.6 Article

Catalytic upcycling of high-density polyethylene via a processive mechanism

Journal

NATURE CATALYSIS
Volume 3, Issue 11, Pages 893-901

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41929-020-00519-4

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Funding

  1. Catalysis for Polymer Upcycling - US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences [DE-AC-02-07CH11358, DE-AC-02- 06CH11357]

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The overconsumption of single-use plastics is creating a global waste catastrophe, with widespread environmental, economic and health-related consequences. Here we show that the benefits of processive enzyme-catalysed conversions of biomacromolecules can be leveraged to affect the selective hydrogenolysis of high-density polyethylene into a narrow distribution of diesel and lubricant-range alkanes using an ordered, mesoporous shell/active site/core catalyst architecture that incorporates catalytic platinum sites at the base of the mesopores. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance revealed that long hydrocarbon macromolecules readily move within the pores of this catalyst, with a subsequent escape being inhibited by polymer-surface interactions, a behaviour that resembles the binding and translocation of macromolecules in the catalytic cleft of processive enzymes. Accordingly, the hydrogenolysis of polyethylene with this catalyst proceeds processively to yield a reliable, narrow and tunable stream of alkane products.

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