| Literature DB >> 35516248 |
Ayah Alassali1, Wolfgang Calmano1, Evangelos Gidarakos2, Kerstin Kuchta1.
Abstract
In this research, the degree and source of recyclates contamination with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) was studied in eight different polyolefin recyclate samples; four originating from post-consumer packaging waste and four originating from a mixed source (post-industrial, post-commercial, and post-consumer). The aim was to assess the applicability of these recyclates in the different products' categories. Furthermore, the impact of previous contamination with PAH was excluded by analysing pure plastics before and after undergoing simulated recycling processes. Polythene recyclates originating from post-consumer plastic packaging waste had lower concentrations of the 16-US-EPA PAH (922.15 ± 420.75 μg kg-1) in comparison to the ones of a mixed origin (2155.43 ± 991.85 μg kg-1), r = -0.35, p > 0.05. The degree of recyclates contamination with PAH was always within the REACH limits for consumer products (<1.0 mg kg-1). On the other hand, only polythene recyclate sample originating from post-commercial waste did not comply with the REACH limits for children articles (0.5 mg kg-1). Hence, the source of plastic waste defines the quality of recyclates. All in all, the results indicated that the contamination of polyolefin recyclates with PAH is attributed to the material's previous contamination, or the sorption of plastics to organic compounds from the surrounding environment. Exposing plastics containing PAH additives to heat during extrusion could result in further accumulation of PAH in plastics. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35516248 PMCID: PMC9058816 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra08554e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Polyolefin recyclate samples purchased from the market for PAH analysis
| Sample name | Image | Description | Source material |
|---|---|---|---|
| PE1 |
| Anthracite cylindrical pellets | Pre-sorted plastic blends of mixed origin (post-industrial, post-commercial, bulky waste, and post-consumer). A selective recycling technology is applied, including degassing and filtration |
| PE2 |
| Anthracite spherical granules | Plastics originating from construction foils |
| PE3 |
| Dark grey spherical pellets | Pre-sorted plastic blends from post-consumer packaging plastic waste |
| PE4 |
| Light grey cylindrical pellets | Multi-phase sorted plastic blends from post-consumer packaging plastic waste |
| PE5 |
| Dark grey spherical pellets | Pre-sorted plastic blends from post-consumer packaging plastic waste |
| PE6 |
| Light grey spherical pellets | Multi-phase sorted plastic blends from post-consumer packaging plastic waste |
| PP1 |
| Anthracite cylindrical pellets | Pre-sorted plastic blends of mixed origin (post-industrial, post-commercial, bulky waste, and post-consumer). A selective recycling technology is applied, including degassing and filtration |
| PP2 |
| Dark grey cylindrical pellets | Pre-sorted plastic blends of mixed origin (post-industrial, post-commercial, bulky waste, and post-consumer). A selective recycling technology is applied, including degassing and filtration |
Fig. 1(a) The concentration of the 16-US-EPA PAH in 6 different HDPE recyclate samples. (b) The content of 6 out of 8 REACH priority PAH in HDPE recyclates. The red line is the threshold limit provided by REACH for children articles.
Fig. 2(a) The concentration of the 16-US-EPA PAH in different PP recyclate samples. (b) The content of 6 out of 8 REACH priority PAH in the virgin PP as well as in two PP recyclate samples. The red line is the threshold limit provided by REACH for children articles.
Fig. 3(a) A comparison of the PAH content between pristine PE and 3-cycles extruded pure PE. (b) The PAH content of pristine PP and 3-cycles extruded pure PP.
Fig. 4(a) The concentration of the 16-US-EPA PAH in PE2 recyclates, before (RE 0×) and after undergoing further extrusion (2× and 4×). (b) The concentration of the 6 out of 8 REACH priority PAH in the respective samples, the red line is the threshold limit provided by REACH to the 8-priority PAH in children articles.