Investigating the Sustainable Reutilization of Sulphuric Acid in Conversion of Waste Plastic into Luminescent Carbon Dots
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Over the decades, synthetic plastics have become everyday-use materials because of their low
production cost, durability, moldability, etc. However, the rapid growth of plastic production
combined with its short self-life leads to a significant accumulation of waste plastics, which
causes severe environmental pollution. Usually, waste plastic comprises a substantial amount
of carbon, especially olefines, which contain more than 86% of carbon atoms. Hence,
transforming waste plastics into high-value-added carbon functional materials is a promising
and yet not much-explored approach that Favors decreasing environmental pollution and
resource recycling. Among different functionalized carbon materials, luminescent carbon dots
are a new class of materials and have gained considerable attention from the scientific
community due to their excellent and adjustable photoluminescent, in addition to extreme
potential in diverse applications, including photocatalysis, optoelectronic devices, solar
energy harvesting, biosensing, and imaging, etc.
Our group recently explored and demonstrated a facile synthesis strategy for transforming
waste plastics into highly photocatalytic active luminescent CDs. The methods involve the
initial acid-mediated polyethylene (PE) plastic mass charring and a chemical oxidative
fragmentation process. In reflux conditions, sulfuric acid converts PE plastic into a graphitic
carbon with ample sp 3 defects. The graphitic regions are separated as ultra-small CDs by
adding large quantities of KMnO 4 and H 2 O 2 to the charr. These PE-CDs exhibit three novel
properties, i.e., (i) when a small quantity of CDs dispersed in an aqueous medium, it absorbs
a large quantity of oxygen from the ambient air in a reversible manner, which can be utilized
further to carry out efficient oxidative reactions under light conditions (ii) when there were no
other reactants in the CDs solutions, it can attack the neighbouring CDs and converts them
into simple molecules, i.e., CO 2 (self-elimination or autophagy), and (iii) under light
conditions, the quantity of the O 2 on the CDs surfaces can be controlled (light-induced
hypoxia). In the current approach, a large amount of conc. H 2 SO 4 and KMnO 4 , along with
water, are used to transform PE plastic mass into CDs and extract CDs from the reaction
medium. The recovery and reutilization of acid in the subsequent batches of PE charring may
not be possible due to dilution. Also, KMnO 4 converts to harshly toxic Mn +4 species during
the process, and easy disposal is unfeasible. Therefore, we developed an ex-situ two-step
approach to make this method sustainable and more industry-favourable. Initially, the PE
plastic mass was transformed into graphitic charr by acid treatment, followed by separation
from the acid and oxidization of the same using a green chemical oxidizer, i.e., H 2 O 2 , to make
XIICDs. We successfully reused the acid for seven cycles. However, the charring quality
decreases as we increase the acid reutilization cycles. We studied the detailed synthesis and
properties of the generated charr and CDs produced at different acid cycles. Compared them
photocatalytic activities by taking rhodamine dye as a model pollutant. Finally, we showed
the possibility of a large-scale synthesis of graphitic char and luminescent CDs employing
this approach
The potential of polyethylene-derived carbon dots (CDs) has two-fold solution: mitigating
plastic pollution and enabling novel applications. We report a scalable method for
synthesizing carbon dots using sulfuric acid. The H 2 SO 4 was successfully reused for seven
cycles, demonstrating a sustainable approach. While the carbonization efficiency of H2SO4
decreased with reuse, the core properties of the CDs, as evidenced by UV-visible absorption
and photoluminescence, remained consistent. Furthermore, we explored the scale-up
feasibility by increasing precursor and H 2 SO 4 amounts by 50 and 5 times, respectively. This
approach yielded highly efficient CDs (80%) that exhibited promising photocatalytic dye
degradation and autophagy activity.
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