Published: 05 Oct 2025
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
are exploring the sustainability frontier of high-performance composites with a
novel renewable energy-based upcycling
process for carbon-fiber reinforced plastics (CFRPs).
The superior strength and light weight of high-performance
carbon and plastic composite materials have reduced the fuel consumption and
harmful emissions of automobiles and airplanes and improved the efficiency of
electric cars and wind turbine blades. But those same superior qualities make
these indispensable materials difficult to recycle.
The new method aims to enable triggered deconstruction of
CFRPs while recovering high-quality
carbon fibers, minimizing waste, and repurposing residual materials into
value-added products, marking a crucial step toward circularity in the
composites industry.
To avoid their disposal in landfills or recycling in
high-energy, low value industrial processes, scientists are working on ways to
manufacture carbon-fiber reinforced plastic materials that allow for their
triggered deconstruction and the recovery of high-quality carbon at the end of
their life span.
But this promising alternative still creates a waste stream
of material with little value, so researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign are exploring an innovative
method using a renewable energy source to upcycle this leftover material.
Chemistry professor Jeffrey S. Moore and postdoctoral
researchers Yuting Zhou and Zhenchuang Xu report in their recently published
paper a new method that uses electricity to modify this recycling
byproduct in a way that converts it to useful material.
This closes a critical loop in the life cycle of carbon
fiber composites, which are widely used in wind energy, transportation, and
aerospace, Moore said.
The research team s important modification of this byproduct happens at the molecular level through electrolysis, a process using electric current to drive a chemical reaction in a solution. The recycling byproducts are basically fragments of the original material, the carbon-fiber reinforced polymer composite (CFRP). The fragments consist of molecules known as oligomers, smaller chains of repeating monomer units.
By comparison, thermoplastic consists of linear polymers, long chains with many repeating monomer units, and CFRPs consist of crosslinked polymer matrices and carbon fiber, or networks of polymer chains that reinforce the carbon fibers. In deconstructing the CFRPs to recover the valuable carbon fibers, the polymer matrix is broken and leaves behind the waste fragments consisting of oligomers with low mechanical properties, Zhou explained.
But through electrolysis the researchers directly modify the
oligomer backbone -- the main structure of the polymer chain at two different
locations. In a single step, they modify the chain by installing two key
functional groups at two carbon-hydrogen bond sites, which enables the modified
oligomers to assemble into a new network formation.
Those installed functional groups can link together, so we can link the fragments into a network. The goal is to link them (oligomers) back into a network and then restore the mechanical performance. In this new dynamic network form, known as Covalently Adaptable Networks (CANS), this polymer material again has strong mechanical properties and the ability to be reprocessed. They can be redeveloped into many other types of materials that can be used for other types of things, including new composite materials, Zhou said.
The practical significance is that we can now take low-value byproducts from composite recycling and convert them into new thermoset materials with high circularity. Thermoset materials are polymers that can be hardened into a permanent, rigid shape through a chemical process called curing. The applications of this type of material are broad, including automotive parts, aerospace components, electronics, protective coatings and more. By creating a sustainable pathway for reusing oligomers that would otherwise be discarded, this work contributes to net-zero waste manufacturing and highlights the potential of electrochemistry for polymer upcycling, Moore said.
The research team also reports significant chemical advances
in their study.
The key advance is that this is the first scalable demonstration of dual carbon hydrogen functionalization along a complex polymer backbone, Moore explained.
The team is already pursuing further studies, including possibly extending this electrochemical method to other materials, specifically polybutadiene, a key component in synthetic rubber and high-impact polymer blends.
This work was supported as part of the REMAT EFRC, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign.
Published: 05 Oct 2025
Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
are exploring the sustainability frontier of high-performance composites with a
novel renewable energy-based upcycling
process for carbon-fiber reinforced plastics (CFRPs).
The superior strength and light weight of high-performance
carbon and plastic composite materials have reduced the fuel consumption and
harmful emissions of automobiles and airplanes and improved the efficiency of
electric cars and wind turbine blades. But those same superior qualities make
these indispensable materials difficult to recycle.
The new method aims to enable triggered deconstruction of
CFRPs while recovering high-quality
carbon fibers, minimizing waste, and repurposing residual materials into
value-added products, marking a crucial step toward circularity in the
composites industry.
To avoid their disposal in landfills or recycling in
high-energy, low value industrial processes, scientists are working on ways to
manufacture carbon-fiber reinforced plastic materials that allow for their
triggered deconstruction and the recovery of high-quality carbon at the end of
their life span.
But this promising alternative still creates a waste stream
of material with little value, so researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign are exploring an innovative
method using a renewable energy source to upcycle this leftover material.
Chemistry professor Jeffrey S. Moore and postdoctoral
researchers Yuting Zhou and Zhenchuang Xu report in their recently published
paper a new method that uses electricity to modify this recycling
byproduct in a way that converts it to useful material.
This closes a critical loop in the life cycle of carbon
fiber composites, which are widely used in wind energy, transportation, and
aerospace, Moore said.
The research team s important modification of this byproduct happens at the molecular level through electrolysis, a process using electric current to drive a chemical reaction in a solution. The recycling byproducts are basically fragments of the original material, the carbon-fiber reinforced polymer composite (CFRP). The fragments consist of molecules known as oligomers, smaller chains of repeating monomer units.
By comparison, thermoplastic consists of linear polymers, long chains with many repeating monomer units, and CFRPs consist of crosslinked polymer matrices and carbon fiber, or networks of polymer chains that reinforce the carbon fibers. In deconstructing the CFRPs to recover the valuable carbon fibers, the polymer matrix is broken and leaves behind the waste fragments consisting of oligomers with low mechanical properties, Zhou explained.
But through electrolysis the researchers directly modify the
oligomer backbone -- the main structure of the polymer chain at two different
locations. In a single step, they modify the chain by installing two key
functional groups at two carbon-hydrogen bond sites, which enables the modified
oligomers to assemble into a new network formation.
Those installed functional groups can link together, so we can link the fragments into a network. The goal is to link them (oligomers) back into a network and then restore the mechanical performance. In this new dynamic network form, known as Covalently Adaptable Networks (CANS), this polymer material again has strong mechanical properties and the ability to be reprocessed. They can be redeveloped into many other types of materials that can be used for other types of things, including new composite materials, Zhou said.
The practical significance is that we can now take low-value byproducts from composite recycling and convert them into new thermoset materials with high circularity. Thermoset materials are polymers that can be hardened into a permanent, rigid shape through a chemical process called curing. The applications of this type of material are broad, including automotive parts, aerospace components, electronics, protective coatings and more. By creating a sustainable pathway for reusing oligomers that would otherwise be discarded, this work contributes to net-zero waste manufacturing and highlights the potential of electrochemistry for polymer upcycling, Moore said.
The research team also reports significant chemical advances
in their study.
The key advance is that this is the first scalable demonstration of dual carbon hydrogen functionalization along a complex polymer backbone, Moore explained.
The team is already pursuing further studies, including possibly extending this electrochemical method to other materials, specifically polybutadiene, a key component in synthetic rubber and high-impact polymer blends.
This work was supported as part of the REMAT EFRC, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign.
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