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RECYCLING AUTOMOTIVE PLASTICS IS PROFITABLE AND GOOD FOR THE ENVIRONMENT
16 March 2007 - DOE/Argonne National Laboratory

Recycling is not just good for the environment, it is good for business. Argonne researchers have developed a technology to successfully recover plastic from obsolete automobiles that may add plastic to the list of valuable materials recycled from old cars and trucks.

"About 75 percent of the weight of an obsolete car is already profitably recycled," explained Energy Systems Division Director Ed Daniels, "so we are working on the balance of that material." Developing and evaluating new process technology for industry is one of Energy Systems Division's main thrusts.

Old cars and trucks end their days at dismantling facilities where usable parts are recovered. The metal is recycled next, leaving shredder residue, polyurethane foam, polymers, and some metal oxides, glass and dirt. Between 3 and 4.5 million tons of shredder residue a year ends up in landfills.

Argonne is working with the American Plastics Council and the Vehicle Recycling Partnership of USCAR to develop and advance sustainable technologies for automotive materials recycling.

Current research at Argonne is focused on "mechanical recycling", recovery of materials such as plastics from shredder residue for re-use in automotive and other applications. The technology being developed at Argonne consists of two major processes. The first is a bulk separation process to separate shredder residue into constituent fractions, followed by the second process, which recovers specific plastics from a polymer concentrate.

Researchers designed and installed a large-scale shredder-residue separation pilot plant at Argonne. The mechanical separation facility can process about 1 ton of shredder residue per hour. About one-third of the shredder residue, the plastic-intensive portion, is recovered as a polymer concentrate.

"Our first year of the project we focused on the bulk separation process to ensure that we were getting most of the plastics into the polymer concentrate," Daniels said. At 95 percent, they have recovered more of the plastics in the concentrate than anyone else has done, according to published reports.

Now work turns to the second part of the technology, recovering high-quality plastics from the concentrate. Using a technique Argonne developed earlier, the wet density/froth flotation process, researchers set up a mixed plastics separation facility.

"We take the polymer concentrate from the first part of the process and run it through a series of stages," Daniels explained. "At each stage we recover a specific automotive plastic.

"We have recovered the polyolefins from the concentrate in the first stage at a sufficient quality to produce car parts," Daniels said. A battery tray and steering-column components were made in mold trials from the recovered materials.

"The economics are promising, but we really want to recover some of the other plastics from the polymer concentrate," Daniels said. "We are working to determine how much material is actually recoverable and the quality at which we can recover each of the different polymers from the concentrate."

The separation facility has a series of six separation tanks. The chemistry of the solutions in each tank controls the separation effectiveness of the overall process. Researchers are now working to recover acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene and a number of other specific polymers.

This research is being conducted under a cooperative research and development agreement between Argonne, the American Plastics Council, and USCAR's Vehicle Recycling Partnership whose members are DaimlerChrysler Corp., Ford Motor Corp., and General Motors Corp. Funding is provided by the VRP, APC and the U.S. DOE Office of FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies.

http://www.anl.gov

About: DOE/Argonne National Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory is one of the US Department of Energy's largest research centres. It is also the nation's first national laboratory, chartered in 1946.

Argonne is a direct descendant of the University of Chicago's Metallurgical Laboratory, part of the World War Two Manhattan Project. After the war, Argonne was given the mission of developing nuclear reactors for peaceful purposes. Over the years, Argonne's research expanded to include many other areas of science, engineering and technology.

Today, the laboratory has about 4000 employees, including about 1200 scientists and engineers, of whom about 700 hold doctorate degrees.

Argonne occupies two sites. The Illinois site is surrounded by forest preserve about 25 miles southwest of Chicago's Loop. About 3200 of Argonne's 4000 employees work on the site's 1500 wooded acres. The site also houses the US Department of Energy's Chicago Operations Office.

Argonne-West occupies about 900 acres about 50 miles west of Idaho Falls in the Snake River Valley. It is the home of most of Argonne's major nuclear reactor research facilities. About 800 of Argonne's employees work there.


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