Assessing the sustainability of plastic chemical recycling requires realistic feedstocks and catalysts designed within sustainability-led frameworks (Plastic-to-X). We link catalyst design and systems analysis to study hydrogenolysis of high-density polyethylene (virgin and bottle caps; Mw = 100–200 kDa). We report Ru–Ni alloy nanoparticles (3–4 nm) supported on titania that yield up to 55% liquid C6–C45 products under optimized conditions, whereas monometallic Ru produces virtually no liquids Operando spectroscopy and simulations reveal structure sensitivity: backbone scission follows dehydrogenation and hydrogenation cycles at defective alloy sites formed in situ. Integrating these mechanistic insights with life cycle and techno-economic analyses indicates profitable processing of plastic caps over the optimal catalyst (2.5 wt% Ru, 5 wt% Ni) with substantially lower CO2 emissions even when using green H2. Furthermore, within the Plastic-to-X framework, we identify a minimum average chain length threshold of C11 for product distributions as a critical design metric to reconcile environmental and economic objectives.
Anglès
54 - Química
Química
17 p.
Springer Nature
NCCR Catalysis (grant number 225147), a National Center of Competence in Research funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (J.P.-R., G.G.G)
I.N.-L. acknowledges the NCCR Catalysis Young Talents Fellowship.
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2021-122516OB-I00 and PRE2022-101291)
Generalitat de Catalunya, AGAUR (2023 CLIMA 00105)
H.E. and R.E. acknowledge funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation (200021_196381)
Papers [1240]