4.8 Article

High-yield, one-pot upcycling of polyethylene and polypropylene waste into blue-emissive carbon dots

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 1925-1937

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2gc04177d

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The COVID-19 pandemic has caused a surge in the use of single-use plastics, posing serious environmental and health hazards. Converting plastic waste into valuable materials is crucial in mitigating these effects. A hydrothermal process has been developed to efficiently convert plastic bags and surgical masks into carbon dots, offering a sustainable solution to address plastic pollution.
The COVID-19 pandemic has led to unprecedented demand for single-use plastics such as plastic bags and surgical masks. Plastics are resistant to natural degradation and are a global environmental pollution problem, threatening the environment and human health. Finding suitable ways to convert plastic waste into valuable materials is crucial to mitigate these effects. Herein, we report a facile, single-step, and organic solvent-free hydrothermal process to convert polyethylene-based plastic bags and polypropylene-based surgical masks into carbon dots with a 96% production yield. The produced CDs are soluble in aqueous and various organic solvents, show excitation-dependent emission consistent with their size of 1-8 nm and exhibit thermal and photostability. We further show how this oxidative degradation approach can upcycle contaminated plastics with organic waste, which is a major challenge with plastic recycling. Finally, we demonstrate a potential use case of CDs as anticounterfeiting agents using fluorescent, stretchable films of CD-doped polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). This synthesis method is a cost-effective, easy-to-implement, highly scalable, and contamination-resistant approach to upcycle plastic waste.

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