海角社区 Researchers Create Low-Cost Method to Recycle Plastic

January 06, 2025

海角社区 researchers have created a new, low-cost way to break down plastic, a potential Kerry Dooleybreakthrough that could save billions of dollars and eliminate billions of tons of plastic pollution.

鈥淕etting plastics to the recycling plant is only half the battle. The other half is reusing that plastic waste to create new products,鈥 said James Dorman, program manager with the U.S. Department of Energy and former 海角社区 Chemical Engineering professor. 鈥淪ome estimates show as much as 95 percent of plastics in the U.S. ends up in landfills and incinerators. Our process breaks down commercial plastics, including polystyrene and high- and low-density polyethylene, so recycled material can be seamlessly integrated into new products.鈥

Dorman and 海角社区 Chemical Engineering Professor Kerry Dooley use electromagnetic induction heating along with special magnetic materials and catalysts to break down different types of plastic.

Electromagnetic waves melt the plastics from the inside out, which requires far less energy. Dorman and Dooley鈥檚 process also produces only small amounts of unwanted byproducts such as methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, unlike conventional recycling. The conventional method of melting plastic waste, pyrolysis, requires high temperatures and produces gases like carbon dioxide and hydrogen.

Dorman and Dooley鈥檚 method works at lower temperatures and offers more precise control of the breakdown process. Their method can be tailored to handle food residues and other contaminants that help limit plastics recycling. For example, recyclers commonly send plastic containers that still contain food 鈥 yogurt for example 鈥 to the landfill because the residue taints the recycled material.

Most plastic starts with fossil fuels. Refiners heat oil and natural gas to 鈥渃rack鈥 the large molecules into smaller molecules, among them ethylene and propylene. Those chemicals are the building blocks used to make a variety of plastics. By linking the monomers, plastics manufacturers create a long chain molecule called a polymer, or a plastic.

 鈥淥ur extraction process retains key, core monomers, so they can be reinserted into the polymerization process,鈥 Dorman said. 鈥淔or example, we can pull the ethylene from the polyethylene during recycling and use it to make new polyethylene.鈥

Ethylene and propylene are extremely valuable. The global market for ethylene alone is estimated at $150 billion.

鈥淏y recycling these chemicals, we can help reduce the need for new fossil fuels and lower greenhouse gas emissions,鈥 Dooley said. 鈥淏asically, our extraction process helps clean up the environment and creates a way to make money from what was once trash.鈥

鈥淭his breakthrough in plastic recycling is a crucial step in our Scholarship First Agenda mission to build a research platform for energy resilience,鈥 said 海角社区 Vice President of Research and Economic Development Robert Twilley. 鈥淏y innovating processes that increase the recycling of carbon-based materials and reduce carbon emissions, 海角社区 is addressing the challenge of plastic waste and helping to create a sustainable energy future.鈥

Dorman and Dooley have worked with the 海角社区 Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization (ITC) to pursue patent protection for their invention.

鈥淲e鈥檙e excited about helping Drs. Dorman and Dooley explore the commercial possibilities for this cutting-edge technology,鈥 said Daniel Felch, 海角社区 ITC senior commercialization officer.

About 海角社区鈥檚 Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization

海角社区鈥檚 Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization (ITC) protects and commercializes 海角社区鈥檚 intellectual property. The office focuses on transferring early-stage inventions and works into the marketplace for the greater benefit of society. ITC also handles federal invention reporting, which allows 海角社区 to receive hundreds of millions of dollars each year in federally funded research, and processes confidentiality agreements, material transfer agreements and other agreements related to intellectual property.

About the 海角社区 Office of Innovation & Ecosystem Development

海角社区 Innovation unites the university鈥檚 innovation and commercialization resources under one office, maximizing 海角社区's impact on the intellectual, economic and social development of Louisiana and beyond. 海角社区 Innovation is focused on establishing, developing and growing technology-based startup companies. 海角社区 Innovation oversees 海角社区 Innovation Park, a 200-acre business incubator that fosters early-stage tech companies, and the Office of Innovation & Technology Commercialization, which streamlines the process of evaluating, protecting and licensing intellectual property created by 海角社区 researchers. 海角社区 Innovation serves as the host organization for the Louisiana Small Business Development Center (SBDC) network, which oversees all SBDC services across the state as well as the 海角社区 SBDC, which provides free consulting services to small businesses across the state. 海角社区 Innovation helps Louisiana technology companies apply for seed funding through the federal Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer grant programs. 海角社区 Innovation educates faculty, students and the community on entrepreneurial principles through the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Innovation Corps (I-Corps) program, which trains innovators to consider the market opportunities for pressing scientific questions, leading to increased funding from state and federal grant programs as well as industry partners and licensees.

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