Making fuel from waste


Today more than half the world’s population lives in cities, and this is expected to rise to nearly 70 percent by 2050. Rapid growth in urbanization has also led to an increase in municipal solid waste — all the trash, garbage and rubbish thrown away every day. This typically includes common household waste, newspapers and plastic packaging, office and retail waste but also used tires and furniture.

The issue of municipal waste is exacerbated by the relentless rise in plastic waste. Estimates project a daunting 1.1 billion tons of plastic burden by 2050, meaning sustainable waste-management solutions are a priority for cities around the world.

Researchers are investigating ways to turn this plastic waste into hydrogen. Hydrogen is billed as the energy source of the future, but its production is hindered by scalability, environmental impact and economic viability. Despite hydrogen’s reputation as green fuel, current methods of producing it rely on fossil fuels and steam-methane reforming, which is energy-intensive and creates carbon dioxide as a byproduct.

Gasification, on the other hand, could be the hydrogen production technique we need to produce hydrogen at the scale we want it. Expose plastic waste to temperatures high enough and the hydrogen present in the plastic vaporizes, leaving behind an additional valuable byproduct: graphene.

Plastic is, after all, a hydrocarbon: polymers of hydrogen and carbon atoms. Heating the plastic quickly enough reorganizes the chemical bonds, with the carbon atoms combining to graphene and the hydrogen atoms becoming hydrogen gas. Flash joule heating is a technique for rapidly heating materials to extremely high temperatures with a jolt of electricity. Electricity converts into heat, achieving temperatures of thousands of Kelvin for a small energy cost and a large valuable product output.

Research led by Pau Loke Show, professor of biochemical engineering at Khalifa University, has applied machine learning techniques to the process to improve efficiency. He says integrating hydrogen production from unconventional feedstocks, bolstered by machine learning and advanced storage, can contribute to a sustainable and pollution-free future:

“Machine learning emerges as a critical enabler in optimizing gasification processes, enhancing efficiency and reducing emissions. Moving forward, these integrated approaches are key to advancing carbon-neutral energy solutions and fulfilling global environmental goals.”

More like this: The united colors of hydrogen

The age of plastics

If you’ve ever spent time in a museum, you’ll note artifacts that date back thousands of years. They tell us pertinent information about the past — from lifestyle to medicinal treatments and everything in between.

It’s our history. But have you ever considered what will be uncovered in archaeological sites thousands of years from today? It’s highly likely it will be a whole lot of plastic, but where’s the value in that?

A new paper published in Cambridge Prisms: Plastics argues that while plastics get a bad rap and wreak sustainability havoc on the environment, they’ll be the defining “type fossils” of our era.

“The type fossils are not stone, metal, or ceramic, but plastic, creating an archaeological record that is resilient and toxic, as well as ubiquitous,” the paper says.

IMAGE: Shutterstock

Plastics travel all over — they’re resting in landfills, drifting in the oceans, freezing into polar ice, embedding in farm soils, lodging in animals and even orbiting Earth. They may shrink into micro-plastics and nanoplastics, but they never really go away.

The authors suggest plastics and “the behaviors responsible for their distribution, produce an archive that may hold some historical and evidential value for society.”

They say plastics at the moment of discard enters them into the archeological record, “comprising material culture that represents human activities occurring at any time in the past.”

Such a record could contribute to understanding the full environmental impact of plastic and indicate the worldview of the “Plastic Age.”

The bottom line? Plastics still bad, information good.

More like this: Google Earth shines light on ancient Roman camps

The bugs that eat plastic

By some estimates there are more than 8.3 billion tons of plastic on the planet – more than 6.3 billion tons of that is waste. Recycling isn’t an option for all of it. But scientists around the world are looking at organic solutions in the form of hungry bugs and the enzymes and bacteria they produce.

Among them: Dr. Chris Rinke and a team of researchers at Australia’s University of Queensland in 2022 published a study in Microbial Genomics about their work with the larvae of the darkling beetle Zophobas morio.

It found that the so-called “superworms,” which normally feed on such decaying material as dead leaves and animal carcasses, could survive on polystyrene alone. Most are able to complete their transition to adult beetles on just a diet of the synthetic resin commonly used for such items as disposable cups and surfboards.

“Our understanding is that superworms mechanically shred the polystyrene, ingest it, and then the bacteria in the worm’s gut further degrade the plastic. We found several encoded enzymes associated with polystyrene degradation in the gut bacteria,” Rinke tells KUST Review, adding that the team is also looking into the degradation of such other thermoplastics as polyethylene and polypropylene.

And, sure, your local waste-reclamation facility might set up a giant worm farm to decompose unwanted polystyrene, but Rinke tells NPR it  would be cheaper and easier to reproduce the enzymes that allow the larvae to digest, say, old dishwasher parts and packing material. A synthetic “enzyme cocktail” could be sprinkled over shredded waste. Add microbes to the material and you could create useful and more sustainable bioplastics.

Rinke cautions that it will take a while before the enzymes are available for industrial use.

“It will take sufficient research funding and several years of research to characterize the enzymes involved in polystyrene degradation, but once we have found the most efficient enzymes, we can offer a biological solution to degrade plastic waste,” he says.

In the meantime, he encourages consumers to avoid plastic, “especially single-use plastic packaging, whenever possible,” he tells KUST Review.

“If plastic needs to be used and eventually becomes waste, then one should recycle plastic waste as much as possible. Last but not least, it’s also important to ask local councils to increase the amount of plastic recycling,” he says.

ANOTHER HUNGRY, HUNGRY CATERPILLER

But the Zophobos morio isn’t the only insect bellying up to the plastics buffet.

Researchers in Poland published their results on a study of Tenebrio molitor in the journal Polymers.

The researchers fed the insect – commonly called a yellow mealworm and another species of darkling beetle – a diet of polystyrene foam (PS), two types of polyurethane (PU1 and PU2, like kitchen sponges and commercial insulation foam) and polyethylene foam (PE, commonly used in packing materials).

The researchers concluded that genetic variances among mealworm populations could account for different rates of consumption, but say 1 kilogram of PS, PU1, PU2 and PE could be consumed over 58 days by 40.5 kg, 46.0 kg, 36.5 kg and 30.9 kg of Z. morio, respectively.

FROM PEST TO PROMISE

The Polish researchers mention other plastivore species, including Galleria mellonella, a wax moth whose palate for plastics was discovered accidentally when a researcher put the caterpillars in a plastic bag and found later that they had eaten holes in it. The information that resulted was featured in a recent study from Brandon University in Canada.

The moth caterpillar larvae, which normally invade beehives and eat wax, can digest polyethylene – the kind of plastic found in shopping bags – and excrete ethylene glycol, a form of alcohol that can be used as antifreeze.

In the study, 60 waxworms consumed 30 square centimeters of the plastic in less than a week. The researchers published their results in Current Biology.

Although the waxworms can consume the plastics on their own, researchers also isolated an intestinal bacteria from the larvae that was able to survive on polyethylene as its sole source of nutrition for a year. Working together, the waxworms and the bacteria accelerate plastic biodegradation. Researchers caution, however, that the waxworms and their bacteria aren’t a solution to the plastics problem but point to possible future directions for waste management.

ENTER MICROBES

Different kinds of bugs – not insects but microbes – are also emerging as potential solutions to the world’s plastics-waste problem.

Researchers in 2016 discovered a bacterium in a Japanese garbage dump that had evolved naturally to eat plastic, and when they tweaked a promising enzyme to see how it evolved, they accidentally made the molecule even better at breaking down polyethylene terephthalate, the plastic used in soft-drink bottles.

But more recently, a group of scientists in Sweden has found that microbes around the world are evolving to eat the plastic trash that has found its way into mountain peaks, ocean depths and remote tropical beaches. They published the results of their study, the first to assess the global potential of plastic-eating microbes in mBio.

Scanning 200 million genes, the researchers found 30,000 enzymes that could degrade 10 kinds of plastics.

The number and type of enzymes they found corresponded to the amount and type of plastics in their locations. One in four organisms examined carried an enzyme that could break down plastics.

“We did not expect to find such a large number of enzymes across so many different microbes and environmental habitats. This is a surprising discovery that really illustrates the scale of the issue,” Chalmers University researcher Jan Zrimec says in the Guardian.

The remarkable thing about these microbes and insects is that plastics are man-made and, in evolutionary terms, quite recent, says Khalifa University’s David Sheehan. “Yet microbes clearly have evolved enzymes that can degrade them in a short period of evolutionary time. If we can identify a panel of these enzymes, we could use enzyme engineering approaches to improve their activity and substrate range and produce these commercially much as we do with biological detergents.”