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Chemical recycling of oxgenated and nitrogenated plastic waste by reductive catalytic routes

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Thesis topic details

General information

Organisation

The French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is a key player in research, development and innovation in four main areas :
• defence and security,
• nuclear energy (fission and fusion),
• technological research for industry,
• fundamental research in the physical sciences and life sciences.

Drawing on its widely acknowledged expertise, and thanks to its 16000 technicians, engineers, researchers and staff, the CEA actively participates in collaborative projects with a large number of academic and industrial partners.

The CEA is established in ten centers spread throughout France
  

Reference

SL-DRF-25-0408  

Direction

DRF

Thesis topic details

Category

Condensed Matter Physics, chemistry, nanosciences

Thesis topics

Chemical recycling of oxgenated and nitrogenated plastic waste by reductive catalytic routes

Contract

Thèse

Job description

Since the 1950s, the use of petroleum-based plastics has created a modern consumerist world based on the use of disposable products. Global production of plastic waste is therefore considerable, and has almost doubled 20 years, now reaching 468 million tons/year. This non-biodegradable plastic waste causes a great deal of environmental pollution (disturbance of flora and fauna, water and soil pollution, etc.). Barely 9% of this waste is recycled, the rest being burnt or landfilled. The health, climate and social problems inherent in this linear economy mean that we need to create a circularity for these materials by developing effective and robust recycling routes. While current recycling methods rely mainly on mechanical processes and are limited to specific types of waste (e.g. plastic water bottles), the development of chemical recycling methods seems promising for treating waste for which there are no recycling channels. Such chemical processes make it possible to recover the carbonaceous matter in plastics in order to regenerate new plastics.

Within this objective of material circularity, this doctoral project aims to develop new chemical recycling routes for mixed oxygen/nitrogen plastic waste such as polyurethanes (insulation foam, mattresses, etc.) and polyamides (textile fibres, circuit breaker boxes, etc.), for which recycling routes are virtually non-existent. This project is based on a strategy of depolymerizing these plastics by the selective cleavage of the carbon-oxygen and/or carbon-nitrogen bonds to form the corresponding monomers or their derivatives. To do that, catalytic systems involving metal catalysts coupled with abundant and inexpensive reducing agents, such as alcohols and formic acid, will be developed. The use of dihydrogen, an industrial reducing agent, will also be considered. In order to optimize these catalytic systems, we will seek to understand how they proceed and the mechanisms involved.

University / doctoral school

Sciences Chimiques: Molécules, Matériaux, Instrumentation et Biosystèmes (2MIB)
Paris-Saclay

Thesis topic location

Site

Saclay

Requester

Position start date

01/10/2025

Person to be contacted by the applicant

Berthet Jean-Claude jean-claude.berthet@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRAMIS/NIMBE/LCMCE
CEA Saclay
DRF/IRAMIS/NIMBE/LCMCE
Bât 125, pièce 10
91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex
01 69 08 60 42

Tutor / Responsible thesis director

Berthet Jean-Claude jean-claude.berthet@cea.fr
CEA
DRF/IRAMIS/NIMBE/LCMCE
CEA Saclay
DRF/IRAMIS/NIMBE/LCMCE
Bât 125, pièce 10
91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex
01 69 08 60 42

En savoir plus

https://iramis.cea.fr/annuaire/?uidc=M7MwSEszMU4CAA
https://iramis.cea.fr/en/nimbe/lcmce/
https://iramis.cea.fr/en/nimbe/lcmce/pisp/thibault-cantat/