Recycling wind turbine blades by breaking them down into their constituent chemicals

Wind turbine blades

Source: © Getty Images

Thermoset plastics that normally end up in landfill can be selectively depolymerised using a ruthenium catalyst

Epoxy resins used to produce wind turbine blades have been recycled using a method that can selectively break certain bonds, making the building blocks of these materials available to reuse again and again.1 ‘This was considered too challenging until now, due to the chemical inertness of epoxy polymers,’ says Alexander Ahrens from the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center at Aarhus University, Denmark. ‘Using a ruthenium-based catalyst, our method targets a specific C–O bond formed during the production of the resins.’ Epoxy composites are very robust, so they’re commonly found in a range of products like plane wings, cars and also wind turbine blades, but recycling isn’t easy, so these parts usually end up in landfills when their lifetime is over.