Abstract

Abstract Plastics are one of the most produced synthetic materials and the largest commodities, used in numerous sectors of human life. To upcycle waste plastics into value-added chemicals is a global challenge. Despite significant progress in pyrolysis and hydrocracking which mainly leads to formation of pyrolysis oil, catalytic upcycling to value-added aromatics including benzene, toluene and xylene (BTX) in one step is still limited by high reaction temperatures (> 500ºC) and a low yield. We report herein CO2 facilitated upcycling of polyolefins and their plastic products to aromatics below 300ºC, enabled by a bifunctional Pt/MnOx-ZSM-5 catalyst. ZSM-5 catalyzes cracking of polyolefins and aromatization, generating hydrogen at the same time while Pt/MnOx catalyzes the reaction of hydrogen with CO2, consequently driving the reaction towards aromatization. Isotope experiments reveal that 0.2 kg CO2 is consumed per 1.0 kg PE and 90% of the consumed CO2 is incorporated into the aromatic products. Furthermore, this new process yields 0.63 kg aromatics (BTX accounting for 60%), comparing favorably with the conventional pyrolysis or hydrocracking processes which produce only 0.33 kg aromatics. In this way, both plastic wastes and the greenhouse gas CO2 are turned into carbon resources, providing a new strategy for combined waste plastics upcycling and carbon utilization.

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