Version 1
: Received: 11 July 2022 / Approved: 18 July 2022 / Online: 18 July 2022 (03:07:37 CEST)
Version 2
: Received: 18 November 2022 / Approved: 21 November 2022 / Online: 21 November 2022 (02:38:44 CET)
Ozoemena, M. C., & Coles, S. R. (2023). Hydrothermal treatment of waste plastics: An environmental impact study. Journal of Polymers and the Environment, 31(7), 3120-3130.
Ozoemena, M. C., & Coles, S. R. (2023). Hydrothermal treatment of waste plastics: An environmental impact study. Journal of Polymers and the Environment, 31(7), 3120-3130.
Ozoemena, M. C., & Coles, S. R. (2023). Hydrothermal treatment of waste plastics: An environmental impact study. Journal of Polymers and the Environment, 31(7), 3120-3130.
Ozoemena, M. C., & Coles, S. R. (2023). Hydrothermal treatment of waste plastics: An environmental impact study. Journal of Polymers and the Environment, 31(7), 3120-3130.
Abstract
This paper presents the life cycle assessment results of a study of plastic recycling via hydrothermal upgrading (HTU), a chemical recycling technology. It was investigated due to its potential to address current gaps in the plastic recycling system, largely due to several plastic packaging materials and formats that cannot be processed by traditional mechanical recycling technologies (primarily due to technoeconomic reasons). As society transitions towards a net-zero-based circular economy, assessments should be conducted with a futuristic outlook, preventing costly mistakes by employing the right technologies in the right areas. HTU can generate up to 76% reduction in climate change impacts when compared with comparable end-of-life treatment technologies whilst conserving material with the system. Additionally, further reductions could be achieved by changes in electricity consumption within the study. This represents a new insight to chemical recycling of polymers by establishing a prospective life cycle assessment study that looks to introduce a step-change in the recycling system. By creating a transparent cut-off model with consistent allocation, it highlights the benefits of introducing this technology as opposed to the current model of disposal through incineration or landfill.
Keywords
hydrothermal upgrading; naphtha; life cycle assessment; chemical recycling; waste plastic
Subject
Chemistry and Materials Science, Polymers and Plastics
Copyright:
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Received:
21 November 2022
Commenter:
Stuart Coles
Commenter's Conflict of Interests:
Author
Comment:
Comparisons to pyrolysis have been removed as the data sets referred to different geographic locations and as such could not be considered as a fair comparison. Expansion of discussion of impact assessment categories and justification of different impacts has been included.
Commenter: Stuart Coles
Commenter's Conflict of Interests: Author