Abstract

Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) waste was depolymerized into bis(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate (BHET) through glycolysis with the aid of oyster shell-derived catalysts. The equilibrium yield of BHET was as high as 68.6% under the reaction conditions of mass ratios (EG to PET = 5, catalyst to PET = 0.01) at 195 °C for 1 h. Although biomass-derived Ca-based catalysts were used for PET glycolysis to obtain BHET monomers, no statistical analysis was performed to optimize the reaction conditions. Thus, in this study, we applied response surface methodology (RSM) based on three-factor Box–Behnken design (BBD) to investigate the optimal conditions for glycolysis by analyzing the independent and interactive effects of the factors, respectively. Three independent factors of interest include reaction time, temperature, and mass ratio of catalyst to PET under a fixed amount of ethylene glycol (mass ratio of EG to PET = 5) due to the saturation of the yield above the mass ratio. The quadratic regression equation was calculated for predicting the yield of BHET, which was in good agreement with the experimental data (R2 = 0.989). The contour and response surface plots showed the interaction effect between three variables and the BHET yield with the maximum average yield of monomer (64.98%) under reaction conditions of 1 wt% of mass ratio (catalyst to PET), 195 °C, and 45 min. Both the experimental results and the analyses of the response surfaces revealed that the interaction effects of reaction temperature vs. time and temperature vs. mass ratio of the catalyst to the PET were more prominent in comparison to reaction time vs. mass ratio of the catalyst to the PET.

Highlights

  • Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a widespread and versatile thermoplastic polymer.Since PET has light weight, excellent chemical/thermal/mechanical properties, and a low price, it is widely used in packaging materials, such as films, fabrics or various types of containers

  • Yunita et al have demonstrated that biomass-derived catalysts, such as calcium-based metal oxide made from food waste, can be used in the PET depolymerization process to produce bis(2-hydroxyethyl) terephthalate (BHET) [29]

  • These findings suggested that Ca-based catalysts have potential for application in the depolymerization of PET

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Summary

Introduction

Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is a widespread and versatile thermoplastic polymer. Yunita et al have demonstrated that biomass-derived catalysts, such as calcium-based metal oxide made from food waste (eggshells and seafood shells), can be used in the PET depolymerization process to produce BHET [29]. They discovered that the yield of BHET using a catalyst from the food waste was comparable to the commercial zinc acetate catalyst. Oyster shell waste was utilized as an eco-friendly and economicallyin PET glycolysis reactions instead of throwing them away near residential areas, causing competitive catalyst in PET glycolysis.

Methods
Glycolysis
Typical procedure of the reaction
Experimental Design
Characterization
Results
At the higher developed magnification in Figure
Optimal Parameters on PET Glycolysis
Determination of the Regression Model
Response Surface Analysis
Optimization of PET Glycolysis by RSM
Conclusions
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