Oxidative dehydrogenation of polypropylene
ORAL
Abstract
A significant barrier to conventional chemical recycling of polyolefins is
their high ceiling temperature which makes backbone modification energy
intensive. In the current work we investigate the oxidative dehydrogenation
of isotactic polypropylene (i-PP) as a potential upcycling route for this
polymer. The main goal of this method is the formation of terminal
vinyl groups (TVD) which can act as nucleophilic centers for subsequent
repolymerization. We perform thermal oxidation of i-PP in air at 150, 200,
and 240 ◦C and 1 atm for up to 24 hours. We observe major loss of VOCs
from the samples’ surface, which we hypothesize acts like a sacrificial layer.
This causes slow diffusion of oxygen to the bulk which is thus only partially
oxidized. Using H-NMR, HSQC and FTIR-ATR, we observe an increase
in the degree of dehydrogenation of the backbone with both time and
temperature. We observe a maximum overall yield of ∼ 2.5% of total vinyl
double bonds (TVD) at 240 ◦C at 24 hours. However, after accounting
for the loss of weight and structural integrity using GPC and TGA, we
note that the optimal yield is obtained only after 4 hours, with a weight
loss of 35%. Overall, we demonstrate that a precise control of process
parameters (in particular, surface/volume ratio, temperature and oxygen
pressure) allows to achieve a relatively high degree of dehydrogenation
while preventing full polymer decomposition
their high ceiling temperature which makes backbone modification energy
intensive. In the current work we investigate the oxidative dehydrogenation
of isotactic polypropylene (i-PP) as a potential upcycling route for this
polymer. The main goal of this method is the formation of terminal
vinyl groups (TVD) which can act as nucleophilic centers for subsequent
repolymerization. We perform thermal oxidation of i-PP in air at 150, 200,
and 240 ◦C and 1 atm for up to 24 hours. We observe major loss of VOCs
from the samples’ surface, which we hypothesize acts like a sacrificial layer.
This causes slow diffusion of oxygen to the bulk which is thus only partially
oxidized. Using H-NMR, HSQC and FTIR-ATR, we observe an increase
in the degree of dehydrogenation of the backbone with both time and
temperature. We observe a maximum overall yield of ∼ 2.5% of total vinyl
double bonds (TVD) at 240 ◦C at 24 hours. However, after accounting
for the loss of weight and structural integrity using GPC and TGA, we
note that the optimal yield is obtained only after 4 hours, with a weight
loss of 35%. Overall, we demonstrate that a precise control of process
parameters (in particular, surface/volume ratio, temperature and oxygen
pressure) allows to achieve a relatively high degree of dehydrogenation
while preventing full polymer decomposition
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Presenters
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Shrishti Das
columbia university
Authors
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Shrishti Das
columbia university
-
Sifat Tanveer
University of Houston
-
Sanat K Kumar
Columbia University
-
Michele Valsecchi
Columbia University
-
Megan L Robertson
University of Houston