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Recyclers now targeting higher-value engineered resins.


* Recycling news from the Society of Plastics Engineers' Global Plastics Environmental Conference (GPEC GPEC Gestion Prévisionnelle des Emplois et Compétences
GPEC Greater Phoenix Economic Council
GPEC General Purpose Electronic Computer
GPEC Global Production Engineering Center
) in Orlando, Fla., in March focused on PET, nylon, and waste plastics in electronics--in other words, mainly on higher value engineered resins rather than commodities.

Carpet recycling claimed two of the show's big environmental awards. CARE (Carpet America Recovery Effort), the carpet industry's four-year-old program to promote reuse of post-consumer carpet, won the Dan Eberhardt Memorial Environmental Stewardship The integration and application of environmental values into the military mission in order to sustain readiness, improve quality of life, strengthen civil relations, and preserve valuable natural resources.  award. But the carpet industry's involvement in recycling didn't start with CARE in 2002. This industry has a long history of reusing materials in its own products, and in the mid-'90s it began working with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  and state groups in the Midwestern Work Group for Carpet Recycle. Carpet makers ended up investing hundreds of millions to build a recycling infrastructure.

In 2002 CARE set a seemingly impossible goal of 40% recovery of post-consumer carpet by the year 2012. So far the record is impressive. The industry recovered 225 million lb of post-consumer carpet in 2005, a 108% increase over 2004. The 2006 numbers will be released this month. Last year, however, about 5 billion lb of carpet went to landfills in North America, so the current recovery rate is only about 4.5%--still a long way from 40%.

But CARE's confidence has grown with its collection volume. Cost of recycled carpet fiber--roughly 75% of which is nylon--has been reduced through use of more economical dry processes and leaving the melt-pelletizing step to the compounders and molders who reuse the fiber.

Successful applications for reclaimed carpet fiber include PP drainage chambers for in-ground septic tanks and stormwater systems made by Infiltrator Systems Inc. in Winchester, Ky. Its Champion Polymer Recycling Div. gets close to a third of the parent company's PP raw material from post-consumer carpet. Champion melt filters and pelletizes PP fiber, then blends it with other recycled PP.

InterfaceFLOR, LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
, LaGrange, Ga., a maker of vinyl-backed carpet tiles, grinds post-consumer carpet tiles to make new carpet backing. Last year InterfaceFLOR recovered over 16 million lb and was able to recycle 84% of it.

Entec Engineered Resins, a compounder in Manchester, Tenn., has its own process for reusing nylon 66 post-consumer carpet fiber in custom compounds.

Even an early repolymerization plant for recycled nylon 6, shuttered for the past five years, is functioning again. The original Honeywell/DSM depolymerization depolymerization /de·po·lym·er·iza·tion/ (de?po-lim?er-i-za´shun) the conversion of a polymer into its component monomers.

depolymerization
 and repolymerization plant at Evergreen Nylon Recycling in Augusta, Ga., had been hampered by low caprolactam Caprolactam is an organic compound which is a cyclic amide (or lactam).

The primary industrial use of caprolactam is as a monomer in the production of nylon. Most of the caprolactam is synthesised from cyclohexanoxime by a Beckmann rearrangement.
 prices and process inefficiencies. Evergreen now belongs to carpet giant Shaw Industries of Dalton, Ga., which restarted the recycling plant in February. DSM 1. DSM - Data Structure Manager.

An object-oriented language by J.E. Rumbaugh and M.E. Loomis of GE, similar to C++. It is used in implementation of CAD/CAE software. DSM is written in DSM and C and produces C as output.
 operates the plant for Shaw and has improved its efficiency. The price of caprolactam is high today, and Shaw reuses the nylon in its own carpet, rather than selling yarn on the merchant market as Honeywell did.

Shaw's more robust collection system is expected to gather 100 million lb of post-consumer nylon 6 for Evergreen, plus another 200 million lb of other carpet types for other uses. All of this activity supports Evergreen's success this time around.

Textile recycling renewed

A second big environmental award for recycled carpet went to CARE's star performer, Los Angeles Fiber Co. in Vernon, Calif., the world's largest carpet recycler. It reclaims close to 100 million lb/yr of post-consumer carpet. L.A. Fiber, founded in 1983, originally recycled industrial textile waste into a fiber product known as cotton shoddy. But with the advent of NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
, the largest North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 textile plants began to close, and L.A. Fiber was running out of raw material. Since there was no shortage of post-consumer carpet, the firm adapted its internally developed textile-fiber recycling equipment to carpet reclaiming.

L.A. Fiber now uses handheld near-infrared (NIR NIR Near Infrared
NIR National Inventory Report
NIR National Identity Register (UK)
NIR Near-Infrared Reflectance
NIR Non-Ionizing Radiation
NIR Net International Reserves
NIR National Internet Registry
NIR Northern Ireland Railways
) detectors to separate incoming carpet by face fiber, then bales it by polymer type--nylon 66, nylon 6, PP, and everything else. Some of this is sold off in baled form. The company also processes one material at a time, often for weeks at a time, at its Vernon recycling plant. Its dry process first shreds the carpet, then separates the fibers and removes the backing. The fiber is rebaled and sold to compounders and other end users, both here and abroad. L.A. Fiber takes the remaining material--natural fibers, polyester fibers, smaller carpet fragments, and material that's hard to identify--and produces a proprietary product called Reliance Carpet Cushion.

ID'ing flame retardants

Two companies presented new automatic flake-sortation modules at GPEC for separating undesirable electronic waste ("e-waste") fractions, namely plastics containing brominated and chlorinated chlorinated /chlo·ri·nat·ed/ (klor´i-nat?ed) treated or charged with chlorine.

chlorinated

charged with chlorine.


chlorinated acids
some, e.g.
 flame retardants. S+S Separation and Sorting Technology GmbH in Germany (with a new U.S. office in Lewiston, N.Y.) presented its new x-ray detector for e-scrap, called Varisort X. It identifies plastics containing brominated flame retardants, as well as PVC--the "unwants" from the e-waste stream. No more than 50 ppm of these contaminants is permissible for e-scrap plastic to be commercially usable, S+S says.

MSS Inc. in Nashville, Tenn., also just introduced a new x-ray detection module to identify plastics with brominated flame retardants. The new module is now part of MSS's e-Sort automatic sorting system for electronics scrap. MSS considers using x-rays to identify PVC PVC: see polyvinyl chloride.
PVC
 in full polyvinyl chloride

Synthetic resin, an organic polymer made by treating vinyl chloride monomers with a peroxide.
 to be problematic: "A thin piece of PVC will look like a thick piece of ABS to the x-ray," says a company official.

Powdertech International distributes handheld and automated resin ID devices from IoSys in Ratingen, Germany. Handheld model SSS SSS
abbr.
sick sinus syndrome
3-FR and benchtop models Slidespec-S2 and mlRoSpark can identify halogenated halogenated

pertaining to a substance to which a halogen is added.


halogenated salicylanilides
see rafoxanide, clioxanide.
 flame retardants. But the lab models, Slidespec and mlRoSpark, also identify polymer types and heavy-metal additives. The sIRoLine model for automated sorting lines uses NIR to identify polymers, including PVC and textiles.

Micro-foaming PET film

MicroGreen Polymers and the Univ. of Washington, Seattle, presented at GPEC an unusual approach to microcellular foaming of waste PET film by saturating it with C[O.sub.2] gas under high pressure (U.S. Patents 5182307 and 5684055). A roll of PET film (0.7 I.V.) is first rewound re·wound  
v.
Past tense and past participle of rewind.
 together with a porous nonwoven non·wo·ven  
adj.
Made by a process not involving weaving. Used of textiles.

n.
Material or a fabric made by a process not involving weaving.
 layer to separate the PET film layers and allow gas to penetrate into the roll. The roll is then treated with high-pressure C[O.sub.2] gas in a batch-type pressure tank. Treatment time for film 0.02 in. thick is 4 to 20 hr, depending on the level of C[O.sub.2] saturation desired.

The saturated film is unwound un·wound  
v.
Past tense and past participle of unwind.

unwound unwind
 and passed through a hot-air oven for 15 to 30 sec, allowing the gas in the film to expand, but not to break through the solid surfaces of the film, which is then cooled. The result is film with a smooth skin and a uniform micro-scale (<10-micron), closed-cell foamed core and 80% to 90% overall density reduction. The treatment costs about 42 cents/lb based on throughput of 20,000 lb/day, MicroGreen estimates.

The microcellular PET film can be thermoformed into trays and deep-drawn cups. Parts with l-mm-thick walls are heat stable to 350 F and have high surface aesthetics. MicroGreen has also tested its pressurized pres·sur·ize  
tr.v. pres·sur·ized, pres·sur·iz·ing, pres·sur·iz·es
1. To maintain normal air pressure in (an enclosure, as an aircraft or submarine).

2.
 C[O.sub.2] treatment with PEN, PS, ABS, PVC, PC, acrylic, TPU TPU - Text Processing Utility , and PLA (Programmable Logic Array) A type of programmable logic chip (PLD) that contained arrays of programmable AND and OR gates. PLAs are no longer used. See PLD.

(language, music) Pla - A high-level music programming language, written in SAIL.
 films.

NEED TO KNOW MORE?

For more information on these companies and their products, visit www.ptonline.com/suppliers.

CARE, Dalton, Ga.

(706) 428-2115 * www.carpetrecovery.org

Los Angeles Fiber Co., Vernon, Calif.

(323) 589-5637 * www.lafiber.com.

MicroGreen Polymers Inc., Arlington, Wash.

(360) 435-7400 * www.microgreeninc.com

MSS Inc., Nashville, Tenn.

(615) 781-2669 * www.magsep.com

Powdertech International Corp., Valparaiso, Ind.

(219) 548-3693 * www.powdertech.com

S+S Separation and Sorting, Lewiston, N.Y.

(716) 297-1922 * www.se-so-tech.com
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Title Annotation:Close-Up: RECYCLING
Author:Schut, Jan H.
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:May 1, 2007
Words:1268
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