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A fast computational framework for the design of solvent-based plastic recycling processes

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Multicomponent plastics cannot be processed using mechanical recycling technologies, hindering efforts to deal with plastic waste. Multicomponent plastics include multilayer plastic films, which are widely used for food and healthcare packaging. Multilayer films combine several layers (potentially dozens) of different polymers to protect products from external factors (e.g., oxygen, water, temperature, shock, and light). Solvent-based separation processes have emerged as a promising alternative to recycle these complex materials. For instance, the Solvent-Targeted Recovery and Precipitation (STRAPTM) process uses sequential solvent washes to selectively dissolve and separate constituent polymers from multicomponent plastic waste, including films. STRAPTM process design (separation sequence, type of solvents, and operating conditions) changes significantly depending on the design of the multilayer plastic film (e.g., number, types, and proportions of polymers). The ability to quickly quantify the economic and environmental benefits of diverse STRAPTM process designs is essential to accelerate the development of sustainable recycling processes and more recyclable multilayer film products. In this work, we present a fast computational framework that integrates molecular-scale models, process modeling, and techno-economic and life cycle analysis to quickly evaluate STRAPTM designs. The computational framework is general and can be used to study the processing of complex multilayer plastic waste streams that contain many layers. We highlight the different uses of the framework via targeted case studies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number109148
JournalComputers and Chemical Engineering
Volume199
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2025

Keywords

  • Computational framework
  • Multicomponent plastics
  • Multilayer films
  • Process analysis
  • Process design
  • Solvent-based separation

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