Upcycling mixed-material waste with elemental sulfur: applications to plant oil, unseparated biomass, and raw post-consumer food waste†
Abstract
Herein we report the preparation of high sulfur-content materials (HSMs) using food waste and elemental sulfur. Peanut hulls and peanut oil were combined with sulfur to yield HxOyS90 (x = wt% peanut hulls, y = wt% peanut oil) to enable systematic investigation of the relationship between unsaturated oil content and HSM properties. Next, post-consumer food wastes cooked in peanut oil, specifically fresh as well as desiccated French fries, were combined with elemental sulfur to afford WFFS90 and DFFS90, respectively. Differential scanning calorimetry revealed all HSMs in this study were readily remeltable and provided evidence for the presence of oligo/polysulfide chains crosslinking the food waste-derived organic matter. Impressively, the compressive strengths of HxOyS90, WFFS90, and DFFS90 were comparable or superior to that of ordinary Portland cement. Quantitative assessment of the HSMs described in this study using the environmental metrics of atom economy, E-factor, and global warming potential (GWP) yielded values ranging from 93.5% to 100% for atom economy, 0 to 0.07 for E-factor, and −0.574 to +0.608 kg CO2 eq. per kg for GWP. Moreover, the syntheses of these HSMs achieved 8 of the 12 Principles of Green Chemistry and 5 of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals. Collectively, the findings reported in this work provide strong evidence that HxOyS90, WFFS90, and DFFS90 will function as thermally-recyclable, mechanically-robust sustainable alternatives to concretes.