Deciphering van der Waals interaction between polypropylene and carbonated fly ash from experimental and molecular simulation

Pollution emitted from power plants, including a considerable amount of fly ash (FA) and carbon dioxide (CO2), annually increases and is challenging from an environmentally friendly and sustainable point of view. To date, laboratory-scaled approaches cannot efficiently replace the FA-landfilling and...

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Published inJournal of hazardous materials Vol. 421; p. 126725
Main Authors Hwang, Sosan, Jin, Sung Hoon, Kim, Yongha, Seo, Jin Sung, So, Jae-Il, Kim, Jincheol, Lee, Yongjin, Baeck, Sung-Hyeon, Shim, Sang Eun, Qian, Yingjie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 05.01.2022
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Summary:Pollution emitted from power plants, including a considerable amount of fly ash (FA) and carbon dioxide (CO2), annually increases and is challenging from an environmentally friendly and sustainable point of view. To date, laboratory-scaled approaches cannot efficiently replace the FA-landfilling and mitigate the stress from CO2 emission. Here, a practically operatable fundamental work by combining carbonated FA (C-FA)—immobilizing CO2 in FA—and polypropylene (PP) matrix is reported and reveals abnormal mechanical and thermal features clarified by calculating van der Waals (vdW) interaction from an atomic scale. This is the first study wherein the interaction between instantaneous dipole moment-induced PP and fillers is simulated and examined. The vdW interactions at the (hetero)interfaces are –59.66, –82.30, and −224.39 kJ mol−1 Å−2 for PP, calcium oxide (CaO; before carbonation), and calcium carbonate (CaCO3; after carbonation), respectively, which provides concrete theoretical support for interesting findings such as the independence of tensile strength on filler loadings and “well-grown” interface-induced higher conductivity characteristics of the composites. Therefore, this work can offer practical solutions to mitigate pollution, provide a new perspective on fundamental physical interactions, and guide the development of practical next-generation composite materials. [Display omitted] •Environmental concerns, including CO2, fly ash, and plastic, are combined.•Polypropylene/carbonized fly ash composites show enhanced tensile strength and thermal conductivity.•Mechanical and thermal performances were elucidated by van der Waals interaction.
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ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.126725