Abstract
Polyolefin plastics, the most widely used synthetic polymers, face dual challenges of heavy fossil fuel dependence and remarkable environmental persistence. Utilizing carbon dioxide (CO₂) and water (H₂O) as sole feedstocks to produce degradable polyolefins offers a promising shift toward both resource sustainability and pollution mitigation. Here we present a room-temperature, continuous cascade approach for the gram‐scale synthesis of photodegradable polyethyleneketones from CO2 and H2O. This process, powered by a synergistic combination of high-pressure electrocatalytic CO2 reduction and hydrogen-accelerated catalytic copolymerization, operates continuously without the need for any sacrificial reagents, consuming only green electric energy. We successfully synthesized a series of photodegradable materials including polyethyleneketones and polyethylenepyrroles, demonstrating tunable properties ranging from rigid thermosets to flexible elastomers.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Materials
Description
Supplementary Materials for Electricity-driven photodegradable polymer synthesis
from CO2 and H2O
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