Plastic
waste comes back in black as pristine graphene, thanks to ACDC.
That’s
what Rice University scientists call the process they employed to make
efficient use of waste plastic that would otherwise add to the planet’s
environmental woes. In this instance, the lab of Rice chemist James Tour
modified its method to make flash graphene to enhance it for recycling plastic
into graphene.
The lab’s
study appears in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano.
Simply, instead of raising the temperature of a carbon source with direct current, as in the original process, the lab first exposes plastic waste to around eight seconds of high-intensity alternating current, followed by the DC jolt.
Flash
graphene made from plastic by a Rice University lab begins as post-consumer
plastic received from a recycler. It is then mixed with carbon black and
processed into turbostratic graphene via timed pulses of AC and DC electricity.
Courtesy of the Tour Group.
The
products are high-quality turbostratic graphene, a valuable and soluble
substance that can be used to enhance electronics, composites, concrete and
other materials, and carbon oligomers, molecules that can be vented away from
the graphene for use in other applications.
“We also
produce considerable amount of hydrogen, which is a clean fuel, in our flashing
process,” said Rice graduate student and lead author Wala Algozeeb.
Tour
estimated that at industrial scale, the ACDC process could produce graphene for
about $125 in electricity costs per ton of plastic waste.
“We showed
in the original paper that plastic could be converted, but the quality of the
graphene wasn’t as good as we wanted it to be,” Tour said. “Now, by using a
different sequence of electrical pulses, we can see a big difference.”
He noted most of the world’s plastic recycling technologies are ineffective, and that only about 9% of produced plastic is recycled. Most notorious, Tour said, is an island of plastic waste the size of Texas that has formed in the Pacific Ocean.
A
transmission electron microscope image shows ACDC flash graphene produced at
Rice University. The process promises to produce high-quality turbostratic
graphene from plastic waste that can be used to enhance electronics,
composites, concrete and other materials. Courtesy of the Tour Group.
“We have
to deal with this,” he said. “And there’s another problem: Microbes in the
ocean that convert carbon dioxide into oxygen are being hindered by plastic
breakdown products and they’re reversing the process, taking oxygen and
converting it to carbon dioxide. That’s going to be really bad for humans.”
Tour noted
flash joule conversion eliminates much of the expense associated with recycling
plastic, including sorting and cleaning that require energy and water. “Rather
than recycling plastic into pellets that sell for $2,000 a ton, you could be
upcycling to graphene, which has a much higher value,” he said. “There’s an
economic as well as an environmental incentive.”
Despite
the overwhelming amount of plastic feedstock, having too much graphene won’t be
a problem, Tour said. “Whatever you do with carbon, once you’ve taken it up out
of the ground from oil or gas or coal, it ends up in the carbon dioxide cycle,”
he said. “The nice thing about graphene is its biological degradation under
many conditions is very slow, so in most cases it doesn’t reenter the carbon
cycle for hundreds of years.”
He noted
the researchers are working to refine the flash graphene process for other
materials, especially for food waste. “We’re working toward generating a good
pulse sequence to convert food waste into very high-quality graphene with as
little emission as possible,” he said. “We’re employing machine learning
programs to help us know where to go.”
The new
study follows another recent paper that characterizes flash graphene produced
from carbon black via direct current joule heating. That paper, also in ACS
Nano, combined microscopy and simulations to show two distinct morphologies:
turbostratic graphene and wrinkled graphene sheets. The study described how and
why the rearranged carbon atoms would take one form or the other, and that the
ratio can be controlled by adjusting the duration of the flash.