JULY - 202119MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY INSIGHTSBy Ricardo Cuetos, VP Standard Products, INEOS StyrolutionTowards Smart Recyclingfor a Healthier EcosystemCXO INSIGHTSPlastics play a fundamental role in modern life. They have transformed many of the applications in which they are usedfor the better. The past year, in particular, has made it abundantly clear to more members of society how critical of a role plastics play in protecting against sterilization hazards in both food and medical applications.Indeed, these are valuable materials, and all members of the value chain can benefit from recovering and recycling plastics for reuse. However, there is no `silver bullet' solution to this multifaceted topic. Below, w will explore the values and challenges of a circular economy utilizing both mechanical and advanced recycling methods.The Goal of Creating a Truly Circular Economy for Plastics:Instead of sending plastic products to a landfill after a single use, closing the loop is a tangible solution for developing a circular economy for plastics: collect plastic waste, sort it, recycle this valuable resource, and use it again as a raw material to produce those same products or new products, again and again. People generally think of `recycling' as one blanketed technology. However, there are actually many different forms of technologies available in today's modern recycling landscape. For example, when utilizing advanced recycling, a polystyrene foam coffee cup could be repurposed back into another cup or a safe container for a life-saving vaccinea critical use case for our existing environment.Polystyrene can be recycled using mechanical recycling techniques, as has been done for decades. However, new advanced recycling technologies have made it possible for polystyrene to become a closed-loop product. Its unique chemical structure allows it to be broken down easily and recreated into new polymers with exactly the same high quality and performance as before and with no down-cycling. It is a process that can be repeated again.The ability to recycle a material over and over using advanced recycling technologies is unlike traditional recycling methods, where any polymer type gets degraded each time it goes through the cycle. Traditional recycling involves shredding, melting, and re-forming materials into pellets. The heating and melting process alters the polymers' molecular chains. And after a few rounds of this, the material properties change enough to limit the recycled material's ability to make products. Because of this, the recycled plastic must be supplemented with virgin materials, preventing a closed loop for the material and limiting the ability to create a truly circular economy.The Benefits of a Circular Economy Across Numerous Industries:The progress in recyclability of plastics such as polystyrene Ricardo Cuetos,
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