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Title Additive manufacturing of recycled plastics: a 'techno-eco-efficiency' assessment
ID_Doc 14680
Authors Jayawardane, H; Davies, IJ; Gamage, JR; John, M; Biswas, WK
Title Additive manufacturing of recycled plastics: a 'techno-eco-efficiency' assessment
Year 2023
Published International Journal Of Advanced Manufacturing Technology, 126, 3-4
DOI 10.1007/s00170-023-11169-8
Abstract Plastic materials have been widely used to replace metals in functional parts due to their lower cost and comparable technical properties. However, the increasing use of virgin plastic material in consumer and industrial applications has placed a significant burden on waste management due to the volume of waste created and the potential negative effects of its end-of-life processing. There is a need to adopt circular economy strategies such as plastic recycling within industrial applications in order to reduce this significant waste management pressure. The present study used recycled polylactic acid (PLA) material as a feedstock for the 3D printing of a centrifugal semi-open pump impeller. The technical performance of 3D printed recycled PLA material and virgin PLA material was compared in this study. The environmental impacts for technically feasible impellers were assessed through the environmental life cycle assessment, while costs were evaluated by life cycle costing. The results were incorporated into a techno-eco-efficiency framework to compare the technical properties, environmental impacts, and costs. The social impacts of additive manufacturing and recycled feedstock material were also explored. The technical assessment results indicated that tensile strength, fatigue strength, density, and hardness decreased with recycled material content compared to virgin material. Microscopy of the fracture surfaces revealed the presence of slightly higher porosity and defects in recycled specimens, which could result in slightly lower technical properties. However, the recycled material was accepted for further ecological analysis as it offered higher pumping performance when compared to the original component and could reduce the burden on virgin material-based production and waste material disposal. Importantly, the results showed that 3D printed recycled PLA impellers are more eco-efficient when compared to 3D printed virgin PLA impellers.
Author Keywords Recycled plastics; Additive manufacturing; Mechanical characterisation; Eco-efficiency
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000946833700001
WoS Category Automation & Control Systems; Engineering, Manufacturing
Research Area Automation & Control Systems; Engineering
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