Canadian Plastics

Turning waste PET into battery components

Canadian Plastics   

Materials Sustainability

Researchers at Purdue University are using an ultrafast microwave irradiation process to turn PET flakes into disodium terephthalate, and use that as battery anode material.

Researchers at Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Indiana, have created a technique to turn waste PET, one of the most recyclable polymers, into components of batteries.

The researchers use an ultrafast microwave irradiation process to turn PET flakes into disodium terephthalate, and use that as battery anode material.

This image shows disodium terephthalate flowers produced from polyethylene terephthalate via microwave processing in two minutes. Photo Credit: Purdue University

“We use an ultrafast microwave irradiation process to turn PET, or polyethylene terephthalate, flakes into disodium terephthalate, and use that as battery anode material,” said Vilas Pol, a Purdue associate professor of chemical engineering. “We are helping to address the growth in the proliferation of renewable energy conversion and storage, which stems from the societal attention and increasing awareness of climate change and energy resource limitation.”

The Purdue team tried the approach with both lithium-ion and sodium-ion battery cells. The lithium-ion technology is currently dominating both the portable electronics and electric vehicles market, sodium-ion battery research also has gained significant attention due to its low cost and appealing electrochemical performance in grid applications.

Advertisement

“The applicability of the microwave technique on organic reactions has gained attention in recent times due to its advantage of the rapid reaction process,” Pol said. “We have accomplished the complete conversion of PET to disodium terephthalate within 120 seconds, in a typical household microwave setup.”

Pol said the materials used in the Purdue technology are low-cost, sustainable, and recyclable.

Source: Purdue University

Advertisement

Stories continue below

Print this page

Related Stories