Elkem scales up chemical silicone waste project

Silicones maker Elkem has announced the successful scaling of its chemical silicone waste upcycling project from a laboratory to pilot unit at its Saint-Fons production site in Lyon, France. This marks a significant milestone in driving the transition to a circular economy for silicones, it adds.

In 2021, Elkem initiated a collaborative project dedicated to breaking down silicone waste, using eco-designed depolymerization methods. This project led to the implementation of innovative routes and processes for the recycling of silicones that are patented by Elkem and partners and embedded in the construction and operation of the unit at Saint-Fons. Recycling silicones reduces their carbon footprint and contributes to securing the provision of the critical raw material, demand for which is rising due to the green transition and digitalisation.

The technical implementation of the chemical recycling is now being performed at a pilot scale. This marks a major milestone in Elkem’s journey towards offering recycled silicones to the market. The pilot unit will provide vital scale-up information for safe and energy-efficient recycling of silicones at the industrial scale, and supply Elkem’s target customers with representative quantities of silicone with recycled content.

“As a manufacturer of silicones since 1948 and leading global supplier of silicones, we are committed to creating a circular economy for our products, giving them a second life. Chemical recycling of silicones is a key technological enabler to close the loop. Through our innovative technology, we can provide a solution for silicone waste and offer low carbon solutions from recycling with the same quality as those made from virgin material to the market,” says Joséphine MunschSustainability Project Leader at Elkem.

Elkem’s patented depolymerisation process technologies offer multiple unique benefits, such as low process temperatures, which enable lower carbon emissions, high conversion rates and chemical selectivity that avoids the generation of undesirable by-products and residues.

This project was funded by the France 2030 national innovation and industry investment programme, operated by ADEME (the French Agency for Ecological Transition), and the European Union’s NextGenerationEU fund.

Elkem’s collaborative project, known as the Resourcing Silicones Polymers (REPOS) project, focuses on developing eco-friendly depolymerisation chemistry to reduce silicone waste. REPOS has been developed with CP2M and IMP academic labs, and the SMEs Activation and Processium. This project received the support and funding from Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes et BPI France and labelled by Axelera.