Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting

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Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting. / Oreski, Gernot; Barretta, Ch.; Koinig, Gerald et al.
Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14. Hrsg. / Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz. Graz, 2021. S. 44.

Publikationen: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/KonferenzbandBeitrag in Konferenzband

Harvard

Oreski, G, Barretta, C, Koinig, G & Friedrich, K 2021, Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting. in Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz (Hrsg.), Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14. Graz, S. 44, Polymer Meeting 14, Graz, Österreich, 30/08/21.

APA

Oreski, G., Barretta, C., Koinig, G., & Friedrich, K. (2021). Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting. In Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz (Hrsg.), Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14 (S. 44).

Vancouver

Oreski G, Barretta C, Koinig G, Friedrich K. Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting. in Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz, Hrsg., Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14. Graz. 2021. S. 44

Author

Oreski, Gernot ; Barretta, Ch. ; Koinig, Gerald et al. / Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting. Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14. Hrsg. / Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz. Graz, 2021. S. 44

Bibtex - Download

@inproceedings{39b919d9ac4240a0b689d3e4572e543c,
title = "Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting",
abstract = "A key target of the Circular Plastic Alliance Declaration is to include 10 million tons of recycled plastic per year into new plastic products in Europe by 2025. To meet this objective mechanical recycling has to overcome two main obstacles. First, new reliable, and cost-efficient technologies with high material separation accuracy are required. Secondly, the quality and performance of recyclates must be improved significantly. Polyethylene (PE) is a globally dominant polymer as a result of its wide range of variations in molecular structure and morphology. State-of-the-art near infrared (NIR) sorting systems easily identify base materials, but they can hardly account for specific characteristics in the molecular structure of PE. The processability and applicability of such recycled materials for high quality applications is limited due to the wide range of variation in the chemical structure of PE grades, e.g. molar mass and molar mass distribution or short and long chain branching. The main aim of this paper is to separate the post-consumer PE into various classes based on specific molecular characteristics, like density or melt flow rate. In a first step different PE types have been investigated using Infrared and Raman spectroscopy and the resulting spectra have been evaluated using multivariate data analysis (MVDA). Applying multivariate data analysis (MVDA) on spectroscopy data allowed the prediction of density. The results showed a good agreement with the measured values, where the calculated densities showed a less than 0.5% deviation from the measured values, indicating that processing relevant information can be extracted from FTIR and Raman data. In a second step the PE samples were measured on a state of the art NIR based sorting line. In a first analysis the PE samples could be classified with respect to its processing methods. However, this work is still ongoing and the model still needs to be improved. The results indicate that existing NIR sorting lines can be used for further differentiation of post consumer plastics based on specific molecular features, which would results in an improved quality of the recycled material.",
author = "Gernot Oreski and Ch. Barretta and Gerald Koinig and Karl Friedrich",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "2",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-85125-844-8",
pages = "44",
editor = "{Verlag der Technischen Universit{\"a}t Graz}",
booktitle = "Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14",
note = "Polymer Meeting 14 ; Conference date: 30-08-2021 Through 02-09-2021",
url = "https://www.tugraz.at/events/pm14, http://www.pm14.tugraz.at",

}

RIS (suitable for import to EndNote) - Download

TY - GEN

T1 - Improving the quality of recycled polymer waste through advanced mechanical sorting

AU - Oreski, Gernot

AU - Barretta, Ch.

AU - Koinig, Gerald

AU - Friedrich, Karl

PY - 2021/9/2

Y1 - 2021/9/2

N2 - A key target of the Circular Plastic Alliance Declaration is to include 10 million tons of recycled plastic per year into new plastic products in Europe by 2025. To meet this objective mechanical recycling has to overcome two main obstacles. First, new reliable, and cost-efficient technologies with high material separation accuracy are required. Secondly, the quality and performance of recyclates must be improved significantly. Polyethylene (PE) is a globally dominant polymer as a result of its wide range of variations in molecular structure and morphology. State-of-the-art near infrared (NIR) sorting systems easily identify base materials, but they can hardly account for specific characteristics in the molecular structure of PE. The processability and applicability of such recycled materials for high quality applications is limited due to the wide range of variation in the chemical structure of PE grades, e.g. molar mass and molar mass distribution or short and long chain branching. The main aim of this paper is to separate the post-consumer PE into various classes based on specific molecular characteristics, like density or melt flow rate. In a first step different PE types have been investigated using Infrared and Raman spectroscopy and the resulting spectra have been evaluated using multivariate data analysis (MVDA). Applying multivariate data analysis (MVDA) on spectroscopy data allowed the prediction of density. The results showed a good agreement with the measured values, where the calculated densities showed a less than 0.5% deviation from the measured values, indicating that processing relevant information can be extracted from FTIR and Raman data. In a second step the PE samples were measured on a state of the art NIR based sorting line. In a first analysis the PE samples could be classified with respect to its processing methods. However, this work is still ongoing and the model still needs to be improved. The results indicate that existing NIR sorting lines can be used for further differentiation of post consumer plastics based on specific molecular features, which would results in an improved quality of the recycled material.

AB - A key target of the Circular Plastic Alliance Declaration is to include 10 million tons of recycled plastic per year into new plastic products in Europe by 2025. To meet this objective mechanical recycling has to overcome two main obstacles. First, new reliable, and cost-efficient technologies with high material separation accuracy are required. Secondly, the quality and performance of recyclates must be improved significantly. Polyethylene (PE) is a globally dominant polymer as a result of its wide range of variations in molecular structure and morphology. State-of-the-art near infrared (NIR) sorting systems easily identify base materials, but they can hardly account for specific characteristics in the molecular structure of PE. The processability and applicability of such recycled materials for high quality applications is limited due to the wide range of variation in the chemical structure of PE grades, e.g. molar mass and molar mass distribution or short and long chain branching. The main aim of this paper is to separate the post-consumer PE into various classes based on specific molecular characteristics, like density or melt flow rate. In a first step different PE types have been investigated using Infrared and Raman spectroscopy and the resulting spectra have been evaluated using multivariate data analysis (MVDA). Applying multivariate data analysis (MVDA) on spectroscopy data allowed the prediction of density. The results showed a good agreement with the measured values, where the calculated densities showed a less than 0.5% deviation from the measured values, indicating that processing relevant information can be extracted from FTIR and Raman data. In a second step the PE samples were measured on a state of the art NIR based sorting line. In a first analysis the PE samples could be classified with respect to its processing methods. However, this work is still ongoing and the model still needs to be improved. The results indicate that existing NIR sorting lines can be used for further differentiation of post consumer plastics based on specific molecular features, which would results in an improved quality of the recycled material.

M3 - Conference contribution

SN - 978-3-85125-844-8

SP - 44

BT - Book of Abstracts Polymer Meeting 14

A2 - Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz, null

CY - Graz

T2 - Polymer Meeting 14

Y2 - 30 August 2021 through 2 September 2021

ER -