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March 23, 2023

Researchers turn Superglue into a recyclable, cheap, oil-free plastic alternative

Researchers discovered a way to turn superglue into strong, clear plastic that can be made into many shapes. Credit: Allison Christy,
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Researchers discovered a way to turn superglue into strong, clear plastic that can be made into many shapes. Credit: Allison Christy,

used Superglue as a starting material to develop a low-cost, recyclable and easily produced transparent plastic called polyethyl cyanoacrylate that has properties similar to those of plastics used for single-use products like cutlery, cups and packaging. Unlike most traditional plastics, this new plastic can be easily converted back to its starting materials, even when combined with unwashed municipal plastic waste. Our research is published in Science Advances.

To make a plastic from Superglue, we first had to address the very issue that makes Superglue so "super"—it sticks to just about everything. When Superglue is used to stick something together, it is actually of whatever is being glued together. This reaction forms of repeating Superglue units called polymers. The polymers made when gluing something together are short and don't bind to each other well, which makes the glue brittle and easy to break.

While short polymers are good for glue, long polymers have more binding locations and . Our team realized that if we could create longer versions of the same type of polymers made from Superglue, we might be able to produce a strong plastic.

The way we make these is relatively simple when compared with how —we simply mixed acetone and a little bit of an eco-friendly catalyst into store-bought Superglue. Once this mixture dries, it produces a solid, glassy plastic made up of long chains.

The new superglue plastic is much easier to recycle than the kind of plastic used to make many single-use objects like cutlery. Credit: Allison Christy,
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The new superglue plastic is much easier to recycle than the kind of plastic used to make many single-use objects like cutlery. Credit: Allison Christy,

In our lab, we can easily produce up to 10 pounds of this material in a matter of days and turn it into usable products. By pouring the mixture into molds before it dries, we can make plastic objects in many shapes, like bowls and cutlery. We also discovered that heating up the plastic after it dries not only allowed us to shape the material into other products, but also strengthened the plastic.

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When manufacturers need to produce a stiff plastic object—like cutlery, disposable razors, CD cases or plastic models—they often turn to polystyrene. Polystyrene is one of the most .

Because our Superglue plastic has properties similar to polystyrene—it is light, durable, cheap and easy to mass-produce—it could replace polystyrene in many products. But there are two distinct benefits of our Superglue-based material: It isn't made from oil and is easy to recycle.

The superglue plastic can be shaped or molded into complex designs. Credit: Allison Christy,
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The superglue plastic can be shaped or molded into complex designs. Credit: Allison Christy,

When our material is heated to 410 degrees Fahrenheit (210 C), the long molecule chains made of repeating Superglue units break apart into their small, individual Superglue molecules. At this point, the Superglue molecules turn into a vapor that is easy to separate out from a mixed waste stream of other plastics, paper, food residue, aluminum and other refuse . Once you collect the Superglue vapor, you can cool it and turn it right back into our new plastic with over 90% efficiency.

Since Superglue is inexpensive and already produced on an industrial scale, we imagine our method of creating Superglue plastics should be easy to scale up. Finally, the machinery used to make Superglue could also be used to recycle the Superglue plastics and could be simply adapted into existing .

Finding a is a big step toward sustainable plastics, but is only one of . Our team is now designing Superglue-based plastics with properties that resemble other kinds of commodity plastics, while still being easy to produce and recycle.

More information: Allison J. Christy et al, Closed-loop recyclable plastics from poly(ethyl cyanoacrylate), Science Advances (2023).

Provided by The Conversation

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