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Braskem Uses Catalyst to Breakdown Waste Plastics into Molecular Building Blocks

Published on 2022-08-16. Edited By : SpecialChem

TAGS:  Sustainability and Bioplastics    Creativity with Plastics    

Braskem's new catalyst for plastic breakdown Braskem announces that it develops a next-generation technology for addressing plastic waste. The process, which uses a proprietary catalyst and incorporates efficient heat management, reduces the need for external energy sources. This results in a significant reduction in CO2 emissions compared to the traditional advanced recycling technologies.

Catalyst as Scissors for Plastics Breakdown


In Braskem's new process, the catalyst acts as a scissor that breaks plastic waste down into its molecular building blocks, which are then used for making the plastics used in so many items we find in our daily lives.

These molecular building blocks, also known as monomers, can be used directly in current plastics production facilities to manufacture new plastics using recycled materials. The product resulting from this process is equivalent to conventional plastic and fully recyclable.

According to Jan Kalfus, Global Bioprocess Catalysis & Circularity manager at Braskem, “the idea of this unique technology first emerged in early 2020, in the United States, but the technology's use will not be limited to the country.” "The launch will be global as opportunities emerge. We want to develop a new way to drive advanced recycling, which is a process that transforms plastic waste into molecular building blocks such as propylene and ethylene that are used for making new, circular plastics and chemical products, thereby reducing plastic waste and the need for fossil fuels worldwide."

You might also be interested in Plastic Recycling Innovation: Materials, Technologies, Applications Update.

The project has demonstrated high production yields for valuable intermediates, such as aromatics and monomers, which can be used to remake circular plastics. "Today, the technology is being further developed and we are scaling up our reactor that will provide important data to support our future expansion. The pilot project is planned for 2025 and the technology should become available at scale by 2030," said Kalfus.

"For now, the main benefits of this new technology are the capacity to efficiently make circular plastics from plastic waste and reduced CO2 emissions due to the lower energy requirements. In the long term, this new technology could come to replace techniques currently used in the industry for making plastics, providing a circular future for the next generation of plastics engineers and society," Kalfus concluded.

Source: Braskem

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