DocumentCode
2197396
Title
Feedstock Recycling Technologies in the Sustainable Recycling of Plastics from End-ofLife Electrical and Electronic Products
Author
Fisher, Michael M.
Author_Institution
Plastics Div., American Chem. Council, Arlington, VA
fYear
2006
fDate
8-11 May 2006
Firstpage
292
Lastpage
297
Abstract
This paper is the third in a series that examines critical factors in the sustainable recycling of plastics from end-of-life (EOL) electrical and electronic equipment (EEE). Previous papers provided an overview of the subject (Sustainable electrical and electronic plastics recycling, ISEE 2004) and the role of energy recovery (Energy recovery in the sustainable recycling of plastics from electrical and electronic products, ISEE 2005). The present paper draws from the earlier papers and explores the role of feedstock (chemical) recycling. In general, plastics recovery consists of two basic process types - material recovery and energy recovery. Two categories of material recovery are of principal interest, mechanical recycling and feedstock recycling. Mechanical recycling reprocesses post-use plastics to plastic recyclates (secondary plastic materials). Feedstock recycling, sometimes referred to as chemical recycling, is the process that converts plastics back to basic petrochemical feedstocks for use by industry in the form of syn crude, process chemicals, or fuels. Feedstock recycling can be broken down into pyrolytic liquefaction; gasification, including the case where the chemical content of the plastics becomes an integral part of an industrial process such as ferrous and non-ferrous metal smelting (reduction processes); hydrogenation processes; and chemical recycling back to reactive monomers or high value oligomers. Feedstock recycling of plastics, although still largely developmental, is being evaluated on a large scale in the United States, Europe, China, and Japan. The plastics industry is actively engaged in R&D. Feedstock recycling technologies can both recover valuable materials and manage substances of concern in an environmentally sound manner. Feedstock recycling technologies have the potential to significantly increase the sustainable recovery of plastics from EOL EEE beyond what can be achieved using mechanical recycling and energy recovery
Keywords
electrical products; electronic products; petrochemicals; plastics; recycling; waste recovery; chemical recycling; electrical products; electronic products; energy recovery; feedstock recycling; material recovery; mechanical recycling; petrochemical feedstocks; plastics recovery; pyrolytic liquefaction; Chemical industry; Chemical processes; Electronic equipment; Fuel processing industries; Gas industry; Metals industry; Petrochemicals; Plastics industry; Recycling; Smelting;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electronics and the Environment, 2006. Proceedings of the 2006 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Scottsdale, AZ
ISSN
1095-2020
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0351-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISEE.2006.1650079
Filename
1650079
Link To Document