Bath Researchers Develop Eco-Friendly Method to Recycle Acrylic Plastics with High Purity

April 2, 2026
Bath Researchers Develop Eco-Friendly Method to Recycle Acrylic Plastics with High Purity
  • The approach uses lower temperatures and sustainable solvents, boosting environmental performance and industrial scalability.

  • A new chemical recycling method for PMMA acrylics replaces chlorinated solvents with greener solvents and uses UV light under oxygen-free conditions to break down PMMA, achieving monomer recovery yields above 70% and overall conversion above 95%, enabling repolymerisation into near-pristine materials.

  • The Bath approach contrasts with ETH Zurich’s UV-activated chlorinated-solvent depolymerisation, highlighting a greener solvent pathway that reduces energy use and environmental impact.

  • Related Bath plastic recycling research is linked for readers seeking broader context.

  • Experts emphasize cleaner, energy-efficient pathways and closing the loop for polymers through high-purity monomer recovery.

  • This breakthrough aims to eliminate downcycling by reclaiming high-purity monomers, reducing fossil-based feedstock reliance and advancing sustainable management of acrylic plastics.

  • Nature Communications published the work on January 28, 2026, led by Bath researchers, reporting UV-driven depolymerisation at 120–180°C under oxygen-free conditions to yield monomers with minimal material loss.

  • By addressing energy intensity and quality deterioration seen in mechanical recycling and pyrolysis, this method offers a potential route to true circularity for acrylic materials.

  • Laboratory-scale demonstrations focus on scaling up, process intensification, solvent recovery, and integration with existing recycling infrastructure.

  • Compared with traditional mechanical recycling, which degrades quality, the Bath method aims to recover pristine monomers for high-quality, glass-like applications such as screens and spectacles.

  • Current demonstrations are on small scales (grams of real plastic waste), with ongoing work to improve efficiency and scale up the technology.

  • The method is compatible with more sustainable solvents, improving environmental performance and industrial viability, though currently recycling only a few grams per batch and scaling is in progress.

Summary based on 4 sources


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