Synthesis of clean hydrogen gas from waste plastic at zero net cost

08 June 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Hydrogen gas (H2) is the primary storable fuel for pollution-free energy production, with over 90 million tonnes used globally per year. More than 95% of H2 is synthesized through metal-catalyzed steam methane reforming that produces 11 tonnes of CO2 per tonne H2. “Green H2” from water electrolysis using renewable energy produces sub-stoichiometric CO2, but costs 2-3x more, making it presently economically unviable. Here we report catalyst-free conversion of waste plastic into clean “flash H2” along with high purity graphene. The scalable procedure evolves no CO2 when deconstructing polyolefins and produces H2 in purities up to 94% at high mass yields. Sale of the graphene byproduct at just 5% of its current value yields H2 production at negative cost. Life-cycle assessment demonstrates a 39-84% reduction in emissions compared to other H2 production methods, suggesting the flash H2 process to be an economically viable, clean H2 production route.

Keywords

flash hydrogen
flash Joule heating
Waste plastic
life-cycle assessment
graphene

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