External Acidity as Performance Descriptor in Polyolefin Cracking using Zeolite-Based Materials

22 July 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Thermal pyrolysis is gaining industrial adoption to convert large volumes of plastic waste into hydrocarbon feedstock. However, it suffers from a high reaction temperature and relatively low selectivity. Utilizing a catalyst in the process, moving from thermal pyrolysis to catalytic cracking could help overcome both challenges. In order to develop efficient catalyst materials for this process, understanding structure-composition-performance relationships is critical. In this work, we show that in contrast to cracking of small molecules, plastic cracking activity using ultrastable zeolite Y materials does not depend on the bulk Brønsted acid site content, but rather on the concentration of acid sites located on the outer surface and in mesopores. This external acidity, however, fails to capture all the observed performance trends. Detailed kinetic experiments revealed that the scaling of the reaction rate with the catalyst loading differs drastically between highly similar catalyst materials. More specifically, doubling the catalyst loading leads to doubling of the reaction rate for one material, while for another it leads to more than fivefold increase. When very bulky reactants, such as polyolefins, are converted over microporous catalysts, structure-composition-performance relationships established for smaller molecules need to be revisited.

Keywords

Chemical Recycling
Zeolite
Catalytic Cracking
Upcycling
Acidity

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary discussions and figures
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Supplementary notes and figures.
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DFT structures
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.cif structure files of the geometries.
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Supplementary weblinks

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