News Release

Orchestrating catalytic hotspots and macromolecular architectures: Molecular engineering toward zero-waste polymer circularity

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Higher Education Press

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Rational design of reaction interfaces and polymer intermediate states for thermal plastic waste upcycling: Advancing circular economy and ecological restoration

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Credit: HIGHER EDUCATON PRESS

The work entitled “Orchestrating Catalytic Hotspots and Macromolecular Architectures: Molecular Engineering toward Zero-Waste Polymer Circularity” was published in Advanced Powder Materials (Available online on 3 October 2025). The pervasive accumulation of plastic waste exacerbates environmental degradation and undermines resource circularity. Selective thermal catalysis emerges as a transformative pathway for valorizing waste plastics into value-added chemicals, yet persistent challenges in catalytic activity and product selectivity demand systematic resolution. This review decodes cutting-edge advances in thermal depolymerization by converging two critical dimensions: atomic-scale active site engineering—where rational design of coordination features and interfacial architectures regulates C–C cleavage energetics and intermediate adsorption—and macromolecular-scale manipulation of polymer transient states—leveraging nanoconfinement effects, chain folding dynamics, and thermal fragmentation to accelerate conversion kinetics. We further highlight breakthroughs in operando characterization techniques that resolve time-evolving reaction coordinates across catalytic systems. By establishing multiscale structure-activity relationships linking catalyst configurations to polymer dynamics, this analysis derives design paradigms for next-generation upcycling systems. These principles enable economically viable, industrially scalable plastic valorization while charting a strategic trajectory toward carbon-circular economies.


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