Thursday, October 9, 2025

Palladium filters could enable cheaper, more efficient generation of hydrogen fuel

Palladium is one of the keys to jump-starting a hydrogen-based energy economy. The silvery metal is a natural gatekeeper against every gas except hydrogen, which it readily lets through. For its exceptional selectivity, palladium is considered one of the most effective materials at filtering gas mixtures to produce pure hydrogen.



Today, palladium-based membranes are used at commercial scale to provide pure hydrogen for semiconductor manufacturing, food processing, and fertilizer production, among other applications in which the membranes operate at modest temperatures. If palladium membranes get much hotter than around 800 kelvins, they can break down.


Now, MIT engineers have developed a new palladium membrane that remains resilient at much higher temperatures. Rather than being made as a continuous film, as most membranes are, the new design is made from palladium that is deposited as “plugs” into the pores of an underlying supporting material. At high temperatures, the snug-fitting plugs remain stable and continue separating out hydrogen, rather than degrading as a surface film would.

The thermally stable design opens opportunities for membranes to be used in hydrogen-fuel-generating technologies such as compact steam methane reforming and ammonia cracking — technologies that are designed to operate at much higher temperatures to produce hydrogen for zero-carbon-emitting fuel and electricity.


“With further work on scaling and validating performance under realistic industrial feeds, the design could represent a promising route toward practical membranes for high-temperature hydrogen production,” says Lohyun Kim PhD ’24, a former graduate student in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering.

Kim and his colleagues report details of the new membrane in a study appearing today in the journal Advanced Functional Materials. The study’s co-authors are Randall Field, director of research at the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI); former MIT chemical engineering graduate student Chun Man Chow PhD ’23; Rohit Karnik, the Jameel Professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at MIT and the director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS); and Aaron Persad, a former MIT research scientist in mechanical engineering who is now an assistant professor at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore.


Compact future

The team’s new design came out of a MITEI project related to fusion energy. Future fusion power plants, such as the one MIT spinout Commonwealth Fusion Systems is designing, will involve circulating hydrogen isotopes of deuterium and tritium at extremely high temperatures to produce energy from the isotopes’ fusing. The reactions inevitably produce other gases that will have to be separated, and the hydrogen isotopes will be recirculated into the main reactor for further fusion.


Similar issues arise in a number of other processes for producing hydrogen, where gases must be separated and recirculated back into a reactor. Concepts for such recirculating systems would require first cooling down the gas before it can pass through hydrogen-separating membranes — an expensive and energy-intensive step that would involve additional machinery and hardware.


“One of the questions we were thinking about is: Can we develop membranes which could be as close to the reactor as possible, and operate at higher temperatures, so we don’t have to pull out the gas and cool it down first?” Karnik says. “It would enable more energy-efficient, and therefore cheaper and compact, fusion systems.”


The researchers looked for ways to improve the temperature resistance of palladium membranes. Palladium is the most effective metal used today to separate hydrogen from a variety of gas mixtures. It naturally attracts hydrogen molecules (H2) to its surface, where the metal’s electrons interact with and weaken the molecule’s bonds, causing H2 to temporarily break apart into its respective atoms. The individual atoms then diffuse through the metal and join back up on the other side as pure hydrogen.

Palladium is highly effective at permeating hydrogen, and only hydrogen, from streams of various gases. But conventional membranes typically can operate at temperatures of up to 800 kelvins before the film starts to form holes or clumps up into droplets, allowing other gases to flow through.


Plugging in

Karnik, Kim and their colleagues took a different design approach. They observed that at high temperatures, palladium will start to shrink up. In engineering terms, the material is acting to reduce surface energy. To do this, palladium, and most other materials and even water, will pull apart and form droplets with the smallest surface energy. The lower the surface energy, the more stable the material can be against further heating.

This gave the team an idea: If a supporting material’s pores could be “plugged” with deposits of palladium — essentially already forming a droplet with the lowest surface energy — the tight quarters might substantially increase palladium’s heat tolerance while preserving the membrane’s selectivity for hydrogen.

To test this idea, they fabricated small chip-sized samples of membrane using a porous silica supporting layer (each pore measuring about half a micron wide), onto which they deposited a very thin layer of palladium. They applied techniques to essentially grow the palladium into the pores, and polished down the surface to remove the palladium layer and leave palladium only inside the pores.


They then placed samples in a custom-built apparatus in which they flowed hydrogen-containing gas of various mixtures and temperatures to test its separation performance. The membranes remained stable and continued to separate hydrogen from other gases even after experiencing temperatures of up to 1,000 kelvins for over 100 hours — a significant improvement over conventional film-based membranes.


“The use of palladium film membranes are generally limited to below around 800 kelvins, at which point they degrade,” Kim says. “Our plug design therefore extends palladium’s effective heat resilience by roughly at least 200 kelvins and maintains integrity far longer under extreme conditions.”

These conditions are within the range of hydrogen-generating technologies such as steam methane reforming and ammonia cracking.


Steam methane reforming is an established process that has required complex, energy-intensive systems to preprocess methane to a form where pure hydrogen can be extracted. Such preprocessing steps could be replaced with a compact “membrane reactor,” through which a methane gas would directly flow, and the membrane inside would filter out pure hydrogen. Such reactors would significantly cut down the size, complexity, and cost of producing hydrogen from steam methane reforming, and Kim estimates a membrane would have to work reliably in temperatures of up to nearly 1,000 kelvins. The team’s new membrane could work well within such conditions.


Ammonia cracking is another way to produce hydrogen, by “cracking” or breaking apart ammonia. As ammonia is very stable in liquid form, scientists envision that it could be used as a carrier for hydrogen and be safely transported to a hydrogen fuel station, where ammonia could be fed into a membrane reactor that again pulls out hydrogen and pumps it directly into a fuel cell vehicle. Ammonia cracking is still largely in pilot and demonstration stages, and Kim says any membrane in an ammonia cracking reactor would likely operate at temperatures of around 800 kelvins — within the range of the group’s new plug-based design.


source: MIT News

Sabic Transforms Medical Waste Into New Materials

The collaboration between SABIC and healthcare partners has created a circular system for non-contaminated medical plastic waste, turning it into new surgical products. Sabic will showcase its collaborations at K 2025.



#Sabic has collaborated with Zuyderland Medical Center in the Netherlands to transform medical plastic waste into new contact-sensitive packaging materials, marking a breakthrough in healthcare circularity.

Working alongside converters Coveris and ACE, plus brand owners Artivion and Mölnlycke Health Care, Sabic and its project partners have successfully proven the concept of recycling used medical plastic back into the medical materials stream through two innovative pilot projects.


Staff at Zuyderland launched a medical plastic waste collection program in June 2024 to address unmet needs and challenges of plastic waste that would otherwise be incinerated. According to the partners, the program consists of a novel collection system for non-contaminated plastic waste that has not come into contact with patients, blood, or bodily fluids.

With support from specialized transport company L'Ortye, the plastic waste was prepared and transported to Sabic to be converted into pyrolysis oil leveraging advanced recycling processes. Sabic then used this alternative feedstock to produce virgin-like certified circular polyethylene (PE) from its Trucircle portfolio.


Two successful healthcare applications

The new certified circular Trucircle has subsequently been used in two healthcare applications:


Coveris produced packaging with 25% content attributed to recycled medical waste for Artivion's guide wire used in vascular surgery.

Mölnlycke Health Care produced surgical drapes with 49% content attributed to hospital-generated plastic waste to be delivered in the ProcedurePak solution made with semi-finished product by ACE.

"We are excited about this pioneering circular business model pilot, which showcases the potential of circular plastic innovations when leading actors from across the medical ecosystem closely collaborate," said Khaled Al-Jalawi, global circular economy director at Sabic. "Non-contaminated medical plastic waste represents a valuable feedstock opportunity, and Sabic Trucircle solutions could play a major role in advancing circularity in healthcare.

Hospital celebrates results: Roel Goffin, board member at Zuyderland, said the medical center is pleased with the breakthrough after bringing together leading partners in the value chain.

Our own non-contaminated medical plastic waste has been successfully turned into new material and returned for use in our own operating rooms.

The collaboration also has academic backing from Maastricht University, which recently received an Interreg EU grant for a three-year project to drive circular transformation of health and care systems in the Meuse Rhine Region with partners including Sabic and Zuyderland.


source : Plastics Today


Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : How UV Affects the Epoxy Coating

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

How UV Affects the Epoxy Coating



Chemical Degradation:

UV energy is absorbed by the epoxy resin, triggering chemical reactions that release free radicals and lead to bond cleavage (photolysis) and autoxidation.


Formation of New Groups:

These reactions can increase the formation of hydroxyl (-OH) and carbonyl groups within the polymer.


Structural Changes:

The degradation can lead to changes in the polymer's cross-linking density and molecular chain structure.


Physical and Aesthetic Effects

Yellowing and Fading: The absorption of UV light can cause color differences and discoloration, often observed as yellowing in the epoxy.


Loss of Gloss: The surface of the coating becomes duller, losing its initial shine.


Chalking: A powder-like residue forms on the surface as the degraded binder disintegrates.


Cracking and Microcracks: UV exposure can induce microcracks on the surface of the epoxy resin.


Loss of Thickness: The surface layers may wear away, reducing the coating's thickness over time.


Mechanical and Durability Impacts

Reduced Mechanical Strength: The structural integrity of the epoxy is compromised, leading to a reduction in its tensile and flexural strength.


Decreased Wear Resistance: The coating's resistance to abrasion and erosion is negatively affected.


Overall Deterioration: The cumulative effect of these changes leads to a significant decrease in the coating's overall durability and protective performance.


How Standards and Specifications Address UV Effects


Weathering Tests:

Standards typically require accelerated weathering tests using UV radiation from artificial sources like xenon lamps.


Performance Metrics:

Assessments evaluate key properties before and after UV exposure:Color Change: Measured using color systems like CIELAB or by calculating Yellowing Index (YI).


Mechanical Properties: Strength (tensile, flexural) and wear resistance are tested.


Surface Analysis: Techniques like Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) are used to identify chemical changes and microstructural damage.


Improvement Techniques:

Specifications often look for coatings with enhanced UV stability, which can be achieved by:Adding Fillers: Incorporating particulate fillers can protect the epoxy matrix from UV degradation and retain structural performance.


UV Stabilizers: Using pigments or functionalized additives can absorb UV radiation or inhibit free radical formation.


Protective Coatings: Applying barrier layers, such as metallic thin films, can shield the epoxy from UV exposure. Activate to view larger image,


source : Hussien Elkaluoby

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Revolutionizing Bottle Recycling by Enabling PET Closures with Innovative Additive Technology

In a major step toward closing the loop on the entire PET bottle recycling, Sukano announces a breakthrough #additivemasterbatch package that addresses a long-standing industry gap: the technical feasibility of producing recyclable PET closures. This innovation enables caps to be recycled within the same recycling stream as clear PET bottles, unlocking true circularity. 

PET bottles are the most widely recycled plastic packaging and represent the largest global source of high-quality recycled PET. Yet until now, one critical component has long remained outside the circular loop: the cap. Historically made from polypropylene (PP) or high-density polyethlene (HDPE), caps have been a multimaterial challenge. Because their material differs from the PET bottle itself, they must be separated during the recycling process, preventing full bottle-to-bottle recyclability. 


Sukano developed an additive package that allows the production of monomaterial PET or rPET caps that can be recycled seamlessly with the bottle. It eliminates the need to separate caps from bottles during recycling, achieving new efficiencies. With caps comprising up to 10% of bottle weight, this unlocks thousand tons of additional bottle-grade PET for circular reuse. The additive package is compatible with both thermoforming and injection molding processes, enabling customers to transition to monomaterial bottle solutions without changing their existing production setup. 


Testing to ensure Recyclability, Food Compliance, and Safety

Sukano validated the recyclability of each additive in their in-house recyclability laboratory according to the Tray Circularity Evaluation Platform (TCEP) and European PET Bottle Platform (EPBP) test protocols at concentrations well above industry norms. While the additive is typically used at 1-2%, in-house tests were conducted at a concentration of up to 5% with up to 50% recycled content. 

Testing according to the TCEP test protocol for thermoforming applications and EPBP test protocols for PET closures demonstrated that there is no impact on color, haze, and IV, fulfilling the technical requirements for the additives to be used in the clear #PETbottles recycling stream. Design for Circularity is at the core of Sukano´s innovation principles, therefore the additive accumulation and multiple recycling loops were also assessed and confirmed no disruption to the existing clear PET bottles recycling stream. 

The additive formulation was engineered with safety as a core principle, featuring the absence by design of any substances of concern.


source : Sukano

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Ocean Plastic Panic: Let’s Talk Science, Not Myths

 Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

🌊Ocean Plastic Panic: Let’s Talk Science, Not Myths 🧪

We’ve all seen the headlines:

🔹 “More plastic than fish by 2050!”

🔹 “A plastic island twice the size of Texas!”


📉 The Reality? Much of what we hear about ocean plastics is exaggerated, outdated, or just plain wrong:


🧪 What the Data Actually Says


🔹 The so-called "Great Pacific Garbage Patch"? Not an island—just a thin plastic soup averaging 1 kg per sq. km

(𝗖𝗼𝘇𝗮𝗿 𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝗹, 𝟮𝟬𝟭𝟰).

🔹 Plastic bags and straws? A mere 0.03% of ocean gyre debris

(𝗟𝗲𝗯𝗿𝗲𝘁𝗼𝗻 𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝗹, 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟮).

🔹 Microplastics? 10,000x below harmful levels globally

(𝗕𝗲𝗶𝗿𝗮𝘀 & 𝗦𝗰𝗵ö𝗻𝗲𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗻, 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟬).

🔹 “Ocean-bound plastic”? A marketing term assumption based on the false idea that 100% of coastal waste goes to sea—when <1% actually does

(𝗪𝗲𝗶𝘀𝘀 𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝗹, 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟭).


🐢🐋 Who’s Really at Risk?


It’s not straws or bags—it’s abandoned fishing gear. Ghost nets make up 75–86% of plastic in ocean gyres and are the leading killers of turtles, whales, sharks, and rays (𝗙𝗼𝗹𝗲𝘆 𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝗹, 𝟮𝟬𝟭𝟵; 𝗣𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗼𝗻 𝗲𝘁 𝗮𝗹, 𝟮𝟬𝟭𝟵).


We don’t need myths. We need science, strategy, and smart conservation.


source : Plastics Research Council

Gurit signs long-term supply agreement with leading wind OEM

Gurit has signed a long-term supply agreement with a leading wind turbine manufacturer. Over the next five years, the Swiss group will suppl...