Recycling of Potential Hazardous Stone Wool into a Non-Hazardous New Stone Wool

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Recycling of Potential Hazardous Stone Wool into a Non-Hazardous New Stone Wool. / Sattler, Theresa Magdalena; Doschek-Held, Klaus; Krammer, Anna et al.
in: Detritus, Jahrgang 26.2024, Nr. March, 20.03.2024, S. 60-68.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

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@article{3ffb3845afd44411bef76baaf2a1b9a5,
title = "Recycling of Potential Hazardous Stone Wool into a Non-Hazardous New Stone Wool",
abstract = "Mineral wool products are man-made vitreous fibres (MMVFs), such as glass wool and stone wool, mainly used for thermal and acoustic insulation. Demolition of buildings generates mineral wool (MW) waste. With regard to the intended recycling of materials, the European Union's circular economy package currently foresees a landfill ban for certain waste streams by 2030. As a result, Austria will have a landfill ban for MMVFs from 2027. This paper presents an investigated route for the recycling of MW waste into new mineral wool (wool2wool). The recycling route aims to conserve valuable and limited landfill volume and enables the reduction of primary resource consumption and CO2 emissions. The investigation was based on pH-dependent leaching tests of the fibres according to {\"O}NORM EN 14429 and hydrogeochemical modelling using LeachXS/Orchestra to identify the solubility-controlling mechanisms. The next step was a thermochemical treatment using correction materials to adjust the chemical composition, followed by rapid cooling through a spinning process. Another focus was on the theoretical determination of the dynamic viscosity to ensure suitable flow behaviour during fibre production. The chemical composition of the mineral wool produced was analysed, and it was shown that the target formulation could not be achieved for all elements within the permitted variation. The variations were due to the dissolution of the kiln lining, which had a more significant influence on the experiment than expected. Overall, the recycling pathway showed a high potential for CO2 savings, resource savings and other environmental benefits by recycling waste that is currently landfilled. ",
keywords = "Mineralwolleabfall, Recycling, gef{\"a}hrlicher, Auslaugverhalten, Wool2wool",
author = "Sattler, {Theresa Magdalena} and Klaus Doschek-Held and Anna Krammer and Roland Pomberger and Daniel Vollprecht",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "20",
doi = "10.31025/2611-4135/2024.18355",
language = "English",
volume = "26.2024",
pages = "60--68",
journal = "Detritus",
issn = "2611-4135",
number = "March",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Recycling of Potential Hazardous Stone Wool into a Non-Hazardous New Stone Wool

AU - Sattler, Theresa Magdalena

AU - Doschek-Held, Klaus

AU - Krammer, Anna

AU - Pomberger, Roland

AU - Vollprecht, Daniel

PY - 2024/3/20

Y1 - 2024/3/20

N2 - Mineral wool products are man-made vitreous fibres (MMVFs), such as glass wool and stone wool, mainly used for thermal and acoustic insulation. Demolition of buildings generates mineral wool (MW) waste. With regard to the intended recycling of materials, the European Union's circular economy package currently foresees a landfill ban for certain waste streams by 2030. As a result, Austria will have a landfill ban for MMVFs from 2027. This paper presents an investigated route for the recycling of MW waste into new mineral wool (wool2wool). The recycling route aims to conserve valuable and limited landfill volume and enables the reduction of primary resource consumption and CO2 emissions. The investigation was based on pH-dependent leaching tests of the fibres according to ÖNORM EN 14429 and hydrogeochemical modelling using LeachXS/Orchestra to identify the solubility-controlling mechanisms. The next step was a thermochemical treatment using correction materials to adjust the chemical composition, followed by rapid cooling through a spinning process. Another focus was on the theoretical determination of the dynamic viscosity to ensure suitable flow behaviour during fibre production. The chemical composition of the mineral wool produced was analysed, and it was shown that the target formulation could not be achieved for all elements within the permitted variation. The variations were due to the dissolution of the kiln lining, which had a more significant influence on the experiment than expected. Overall, the recycling pathway showed a high potential for CO2 savings, resource savings and other environmental benefits by recycling waste that is currently landfilled.

AB - Mineral wool products are man-made vitreous fibres (MMVFs), such as glass wool and stone wool, mainly used for thermal and acoustic insulation. Demolition of buildings generates mineral wool (MW) waste. With regard to the intended recycling of materials, the European Union's circular economy package currently foresees a landfill ban for certain waste streams by 2030. As a result, Austria will have a landfill ban for MMVFs from 2027. This paper presents an investigated route for the recycling of MW waste into new mineral wool (wool2wool). The recycling route aims to conserve valuable and limited landfill volume and enables the reduction of primary resource consumption and CO2 emissions. The investigation was based on pH-dependent leaching tests of the fibres according to ÖNORM EN 14429 and hydrogeochemical modelling using LeachXS/Orchestra to identify the solubility-controlling mechanisms. The next step was a thermochemical treatment using correction materials to adjust the chemical composition, followed by rapid cooling through a spinning process. Another focus was on the theoretical determination of the dynamic viscosity to ensure suitable flow behaviour during fibre production. The chemical composition of the mineral wool produced was analysed, and it was shown that the target formulation could not be achieved for all elements within the permitted variation. The variations were due to the dissolution of the kiln lining, which had a more significant influence on the experiment than expected. Overall, the recycling pathway showed a high potential for CO2 savings, resource savings and other environmental benefits by recycling waste that is currently landfilled.

KW - Mineralwolleabfall

KW - Recycling

KW - gefährlicher

KW - Auslaugverhalten

KW - Wool2wool

U2 - 10.31025/2611-4135/2024.18355

DO - 10.31025/2611-4135/2024.18355

M3 - Article

VL - 26.2024

SP - 60

EP - 68

JO - Detritus

JF - Detritus

SN - 2611-4135

IS - March

ER -