EPFL engineers introduce a new approach for recycling plastics
Thursday 30 September 2021

©EPFL EPFL, 22 September 2021. Two EPFL engineers have come up with a revolutionary new method
for tackling plastic pollution by harnessing the inner workings of
proteins. The result? A whole new way of looking at plastic recycling
Each human being uses, on average, 30 kg of plastic per year. Given that
global life expectancy currently stands at approximately 70 years, each
person will discard some two metric tons of plastic in his or her
lifetime. Multiply that by the number people on earth – which is growing
constantly – and the total is staggering. In light of this, Francesco
Stellacci, a full professor and head of the Supramolecular Nanomaterials
and Interfaces Laboratory at EPFL’s School of Engineering, began
thinking about whether there was a way to solve the problem of used
plastics and recycle it more effectively. Stellacci established a
collaboration with Prof. Sebastian J. Maerkl in the Bioengineering
Institute at EPFL and they decided to co-advise a PhD student, Simone
Giaveri, the team has published its conclusions, based on scientific
research, in Advanced Materials.
After reviewing the existing plastic-recycling options available, the
engineers decided to think up a completely new approach. “When we use
biodegradable plastics, the degradation process leaves residue that must
be stockpiled or buried. The more land that is allocated for this means
the less land available for farming, and there are environmental
consequences to take into account as bio-degradation product necessarily
change the area’s ecosystem,” says Stellacci. So how can we come up
with a comprehensive solution to the problem of recycling plastics? Part
of the answer could very well come from nature itself.
A pearl necklace
Proteins are one of the main organic compounds of which our world is
made of. Like DNA, they form part of the family of polymers; proteins
are long chains of molecules, or monomers, known as amino acids. “A
protein is like a string of pearls, where each pearl is an amino
acid. Each pearl has a different colour, and the colour-sequence
determines the string structure and consequently its properties. In
nature, protein chains break up into the constituents amino acids and
cells put such amino acids back together to form new proteins, that is
they create new strings of pearls with a different colour sequence”
Giaveri says.
In the lab, Giaveri initially attempted to replicate this natural cycle,
outside living organisms. “We selected proteins and divided them up
into amino acids. We then put the amino acids into a cell-free
biological system, that assembled the amino acids back into new proteins
with entirely different structures and applications,” he explains. For
instance, Giaveri and Stellacci successfully transformed silk into a
protein used in biomedical technology. “Importantly, when you break down
and assemble proteins in this way, the quality of the proteins produced
is exactly the same of that of a newly synthesized protein. Indeed, you
are building something new,” Stellacci says.
Plastic is a polymer, too
So what’s the connection between protein assembly and plastic recycling?
Because both compounds are polymers, the mechanisms naturally occurring
in proteins could be applied to plastics as well. While this analogy
may sound promising, Stellacci warns that developing such methods won’t
happen overnight. “It will require a radically different mindset.
Polymers are strings of pearls, but synthetic polymers are made mostly
of pearls all of the same colour and when the colour is different the
sequence of colour rarely matters. Furthermore, we have no efficient way
to assemble synthetic polymers from different colour pearls in a way
that controls their sequence.” He would also point out, however, that
this new approach to plastic recycling appears to be the only one that
truly adheres to the postulate of a circular economy. "In the future,
sustainability will entail pushing upcycling to the extreme, throwing a
lot of different object together and recycling the mixture to produce
every day a different new material. Nature already does this," he
concludes.
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