Chemical Recycling of Polymethacrylates
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2533/chimia.2025.484PMID:
40838400Keywords:
Chemical recycling, Depolymerization, PMMA, PyrolysisAbstract
Polymethacrylates, including poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), are produced on a large scale for applications ranging from optics to construction, yet their end-of-life fate remains largely linear. Chemical recycling to regenerate the monomer (depolymerization) offers a promising route to circularity, but conventional methods such as pyrolysis rely on high-temperature random scission pathways that suffer from poor selectivity and undesirable side reactions. Recent advances have demonstrated that polymethacrylates synthesized by controlled radical polymerizations can undergo efficient depolymerization under milder conditions through reactivation of thermally labile chain-end functionalities. Emerging mid-chain-initiated depolymerization strategies further extend low temperature chemical recycling to polymers produced by conventional free-radical polymerization. This review highlights these developments, comparing mechanisms, limitations, and opportunities towards scalable, energy-efficient chemical recycling of polymethacrylates to support a more sustainable plastic economy.
Funding data
-
HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council
Grant numbers 949219
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Glen R. Jones, Athina Anastasaki

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

