4.3 Article

Sustainable polymers

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS METHODS PRIMERS
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s43586-022-00124-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ontario Research Fund, Research Excellence Program
  2. Ontario Ministry of Colleges and Universities [ORF-RE09]
  3. Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA)/University of Guelph -Ontario Agri-Food Innovation Alliance
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  5. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) through Bioindustrial Innovation Canada (BIC) Bioproducts AgSci Cluster Program
  6. European Commission
  7. Wallonia

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This Primer provides an overview of the research and potential of sustainable polymers, focusing on their life cycle, synthetic routes from renewable carbon feedstocks, production, applications, limitations, and end of life options. It also discusses the challenges and potential solutions for recycling and composting. The development of sustainable polymers can contribute to a circular economy for plastics by reducing the use of finite resources.
Sustainable polymers are materials derived from renewable, recycled and waste carbon resources and their combinations, which at the end of life can be recycled, biodegraded or composted. Sustainable polymers also exhibit reduced environmental impact throughout their life cycle. This Primer presents an overview of the research in and potential of sustainable polymers, with a focus on their life cycle, synthetic routes from renewable carbon feedstocks, production, material characterization, applications, end of life, data reproducibility and limitations faced, and provides a brief outlook. The Primer also briefly covers other carbon feedstocks such as carbon dioxide and wastes, including agricultural and woody residues. Although still in their infancy, new sustainable polymers are already finding applications in packaging, automotive parts and 3D printing. This Primer also discusses the headwinds facing the adoption of sustainable polymers, including complexities of recycling and composting, manufacturing scale-up, data reproducibility, deposition and potential solutions. Development of sustainable polymers will accelerate the age of sustainable polymers and create a truly circular economy for plastics by reducing production and use of virgin plastics from finite resources.

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