| Literature DB >> 28097922 |
Jakob Hildebrandt1, Alberto Bezama1, Daniela Thrän1,2.
Abstract
When surveying the trends and criteria for the design for recycling (DfR) of bio-based polymers, priorities appear to lie in energy recovery at the end of the product life of durable products, such as bio-based thermosets. Non-durable products made of thermoplastic polymers exhibit good properties for material recycling. The latter commonly enjoy growing material recycling quotas in countries that enforce a landfill ban. Quantitative and qualitative indicators are needed for characterizing progress in the development towards more recycling friendly bio-based polymers. This would enable the deficits in recycling bio-based plastics to be tracked and improved. The aim of this paper is to analyse the trends in the DfR of bio-based polymers and the constraints posed by the recycling infrastructure on plastic polymers from a systems perspective. This analysis produces recommendations on how life cycle assessment indicators can be introduced into the dialogue between designers and recyclers in order to promote DfR principles to enhance the cascading use of bio-based polymers within the bioeconomy, and to meet circular economy goals.Entities:
Keywords: Design for recyclability; bio-based polymers; cascade use; system analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28097922 PMCID: PMC5560479 DOI: 10.1177/0734242X16683445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Waste Manag Res
Figure 1.Methodological procedure proposed for assessing cascade use performance. DfR: design for recycling.
Figure 2.Scope and limits of the study.
Focus areas and research questions for conducting the qualitative assessment.
| Perspective | Focus areas | Research questions |
|---|---|---|
| Design | Enhancing compatibility | • What are the intended benefits in using additives in polymer design? |
| Minimization of unintentional effects | • What are the specific contents of e.g. additives, impurities and contaminants in novel bio-based polymers? | |
| Innovation | Enhancing | • How could emerging manufacturing trends of polymer products compromise circular economy goals? |
| Circular economy | Improvements for the circular economy | • How could emerging manufacturing trends of polymer products compromise circular economy goals? |
With regard to manufacturing processes only.
Application of standard additives for selected bio-based polymers (adapted from Bart, 2006; bioplastics magazine, 2015; EC Health and Consumers Directorate-General, 2014; Imre and Pukánszky, 2013; Villanueva and Eder, 2014; Weil and Levchik, 2016).
| Polymer | Additives | Exemplary types of additives | Product application | Possible negative effects on second use phase | Legislative coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bio-based PU and PP | Flame retardants | Metal hydroxides, | Wires, cables, | Can compromise food safety in the 2nd product life | Brominated flame retardants should be removed according to WEEE (2012/19/EU) |
| Bio-based PET and PE | UV-protection, | Organic and organo-metallic stabilizers | Plastic bottles, outdoor equipment | Maximum sum content of heavy metals 0.001% w/w according to packaging waste directive | |
| Bio-based PET and PE | Plasticizers/ | Phthalates, | Plastic bottles | Can compromise e.g. recycling of PET in textile industries | Phthalates are regulated under REACH, food contact legislation, and RoHS |
| Unsaturated polyester resins and acrylic resins, | Fillers and modifiers | Mineral fillers such calcium carbonate | Thermally conductive plastics, such as marbles and panels | Can be beneficial for stabilizing recyclate | |
| PE-PLA blends | Compatibilizers | Co-polymers, maleic anhydrid | Mixed polymer recyclate | Blends in the 1st use phase affect blendability in 2nd use phase |
PU: polyurethane; PP: polypropylene; PET: polyethylene terephthalate; PE: polyethylene; PLA: polylactic acid; UV: ultraviolet WEEE: Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive; ROHS: restriction of hazardous substances directive; REACH: European regulation on registration, evaluation, authorisation and restriction of chemicals.
Common recycling processes and deterioration rates for selected polymers (adapted from Hamad et al., 2013; Hollstein and Wohlebe, 2015; La Mantia 1998).
| Types of emerging | Polymer type | Common separation | Recycling process | Most prominent secondary products | Relevant criteria for recycling | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Most relevant properties | Recycling processes | |||||
| Drop-in solution | Bio-based PET | NIR sorting applicable, | Extrusion with virgin material, | Polyester fibres, non-food bottles | Decreasing melt viscosity | <3 Extrusion cycles |
| Bio-based PE | NIR sorting applicable, | Extrusion melting | Downcycling (non-opaque materials), refuse derived fuel | Deteriorated melt flow index (MFI) | <4 Extrusion cycles | |
| Novel polymer solution | PLA | Small amount blendable with PE or PET, | a. Home and industrial composting or | Refuse derived fuel, | Decreasing intrinsic viscosity | <2 Extrusion cycles |
| Blends of novel polymers and fossil-based polymers | PLA-PMMA blend | Bulky waste/ scrap collection | Thermal treatment | Waste2Energy or | Mineral contents, heavy metal contents | Recovery efficiency of pyrolysis |
PET: polyethylene terephthalate; PMMA: polymethylmethacrylate; PE: polyethylene; PLA: polylactic acid; NIR: near-infrared; MMA: methylmethacrylate.
Figure 3.Sustainability rules for cascading use of bio-based polymers within a circular economy. EOL: end of life; PET: polyethylene terephthalate; PE: polyethylene; PP: polypropylene; PLA: polylactic acid; PHA: polyhydroxyalkanoat; MFI: melt flow index.
Figure 4.Procedure for calculating performance metrics along cascade use chains for polymers.
Qualitative classification with related quantitative metrics.
| Polymer types | Performance in maximizing resource efficiency & minimizing deterioration over multiple use stages | Energy demand in processing and recycling | Compatibility in end-of-life | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EOL | Metabolic consistency at most common EOL paths | |||
| Bio-PA, expanded PLA | High benefits & low polymer deterioration at first EOL | Medium energy demand | Easy collection of bulky waste and recycling via extrusion | Material recycling in technical environment |
| Bio-PU, bio-phenol resin, PLA-biofoam | High benefits & high polymer deterioration at first EOL | Medium energy demand | Thermal recovery | Treatment and inertization in technical environment |
| PLA-blends e.g. with PMMA | High benefits & medium polymer | Medium to high energy demand | Easy collection, but advanced chemical recycling necessary | Partially recyclable in technical environment |
| Starch blends | Low benefits and high polymer deterioration at first EOL | Low energy demand | Separable | Not given in natural environments, partly given in technical environments |
| PLA foils and bags | Low benefits and | Low energy demand | Separation and energetic recovery in waste incineration | Inertization via incineration and under defined industrial composting conditions |
EOL: end-of-life; LCI: life cycle inventory; Bio-PU: bio-based polyurethane; PLA: polylactic acid; MFA: material flow accounting; PMMA: polymethylmethacrylate.