New chemical technique to turn waste plastic into an effective carbon dioxide sink
Rice University have discovered a chemical technique to turn waste plastic into an effective carbon dioxide (CO2) sorbent for industry. Researchers have found that heating plastic waste in the presence of potassium acetate produced particles with nanometer-scale pores that trap carbon dioxide molecules. Sites like power plant exhaust stacks can be fitted with this waste-plastic-derived material to remove enormous amounts of CO2 that would normally fill the atmosphere. They have found that polypropylene and high- and low-density polyethylene which are the main constituents in household waste work especially well for capturing CO2 when treated with potassium acetate. Pyrolyzing plastic has been done before, but produces toxic waste, whereas this method using potassium acetate produces porous particles able to hold up to 18% of their own weight in CO2 at room temperature.
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