Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title Life Cycle Assessment of a Plastic Part Injected with Recycled Polypropylene: A Comparison with Alternative Virgin Materials
ID_Doc 6614
Authors Galve, JE; Elduque, D; Pina, C; Javierre, C
Title Life Cycle Assessment of a Plastic Part Injected with Recycled Polypropylene: A Comparison with Alternative Virgin Materials
Year 2022
Published International Journal Of Precision Engineering And Manufacturing-Green Technology, 9, 3
DOI 10.1007/s40684-021-00363-2
Abstract Plastics recycling is becoming a common action to reduce our products and processes' environmental impact, and it is of the utmost importance to introduce circular economy strategies. However, for most of the different types of thermoplastics, recycling is not currently its usual end of life due to the technical difficulties in the sorting and recycling processes. This paper presents the complete life cycle assessment of an industrial component made with three different thermoplastics; two virgin thermoplastics typically used for similar parts in the market as Polyamide 6 and Polypropylene, and an alternative source of 100% recycled Polypropylene. All life cycle stages are included in the study. After carrying out the life cycle inventory, calculations of the environmental impact of each life cycle steps have been performed with ReCiPe 2016 EndPoint (H/A) v1.03/World and with IPCC 2013 GWP 100a v1.03 methodologies, comparing all three materials under the same conditions. A sensibility assessment has also been performed, calculating a worst-case scenario of the recycled material, and considering higher material acquisition distances. This study shows that recycled Polypropylene contributes to reducing the overall environmental impact of the component life cycle by 29.8% under ReCiPe, and by 42.8% under Carbon Footprint when compared to virgin Polypropylene. For the worst-case scenario, these reductions in the environmental impact of the component life cycle are also significant: 23.2% and 36.4%, respectively, showing that the use of recycled polymers is a key approach to reduce the environmental impact of plastic components.
Author Keywords Life cycle analysis; LCA; Recycling; Polypropylene; Injection; Post-industrial; Induction hobs
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000656398600001
WoS Category Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Manufacturing; Engineering, Mechanical
Research Area Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering
PDF
Similar atricles
Scroll