DocumentCode :
3130320
Title :
The triboelectric pen: an electrostatic method for the identification of plastics in recycling
Author :
Hearn, G.L. ; Mucci, P.E.R. ; Eyres, A. ; Amner, J.A.
Author_Institution :
Depts. of Mech. & Electr. Eng., Southampton Univ., UK
Volume :
4
fYear :
1996
fDate :
6-10 Oct 1996
Firstpage :
1955
Abstract :
The automotive industry faces worldwide pressure to help find environmentally friendly ways of disposing of end of life vehicles. The metals in cars are already recycled and therefore the nonmetallic content provides the only opportunity for improvement. Most modern cars contain between 21% and 23% of solid nonmetallic materials. Plastics make up about half of this in the form of fabrics, resin bonded products and moulded components. In order to successfully recycle plastics it is first necessary to identify them and sort them into streams based on polymer type, e.g., polyethylene, ABS, nylon, etc. Failure to do this can have serious consequences on the later stages of the recycling process where contamination by noncompatible polymers can ruin whole batches of recyclate. Identifying plastics for recycling has always been an extremely difficult and messy business. It has usually meant burning the unidentified plastic and looking at the colour of the flame or smelling the smoke it produces. This technique is often inaccurate, time consuming and unhealthy. In a project sponsored by the Ford Motor Company, Wolfson Electrostatics and the Prototype Design Group at the University of Southampton have developed the triboelectric pen. This device can identify different families of plastic literally `at a stroke´. The principles and use of the triboelectric pen are described
Keywords :
automobile industry; automobiles; electrostatic devices; plastics; recycling; static electrification; triboelectricity; ABS; Ford Motor Company; Prototype Design Group; Southampton University; Wolfson Electrostatics; automotive industry; electrostatic method; fabrics; moulded components; nylon; plastics identification; plastics recycling; polyethylene; recycling; resin bonded products; triboelectric pen; Automotive engineering; Automotive materials; Electrostatics; Fabrics; Plastics; Polymers; Recycling; Resins; Solids; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Industry Applications Conference, 1996. Thirty-First IAS Annual Meeting, IAS '96., Conference Record of the 1996 IEEE
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
0197-2618
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3544-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IAS.1996.563834
Filename :
563834
Link To Document :
بازگشت