Efforts have been made recently to increase recycling and to use recycled materials in various products and end uses. Products made from recycled composite materials also positively contribute to the environment, as they reuse waste materials that would otherwise be sent for discarding into dumps or landfill waste areas. Manufacturing products from recycled composite materials has not been without challenges, however. Recycling processes can be more costly in certain situations, which has limited more large-scale adoption across certain product lines. Recycled composite materials have at times also lacked consistency, uniform quality, and desired structural integrity or characteristics to meet the demands of certain product specification requirements.
In the context of industrial products (e.g., railroad ties, industrial matting), there are unique demanding requirements that must be met. For instance, the products must be able to withstand insect and fungal attacks and exposure to outdoor elements, such as variable weather conditions, wide temperature variations, all types of precipitation, and extended exposure to ultraviolet radiation. At the same time, industrial products must exhibit certain structural characteristics, such as maintaining integrity even when subject to heavy loads. Therefore, the products generally need to exhibit some effective degree of stiffness, strength, toughness, and resistance to degradation. In the past, industrial products have been manufactured from a variety of materials, such as wood, metals, and concrete, but such materials suffer from deficiencies and fall short of fulfilling the demanding requirements of their end uses, such as those discussed above.
Plastic-based olefins, polymers, and composite polymer mixtures are alternative materials from which industrial products have been manufactured. They have been recognized to provide certain advantages over other materials, such as resisting degradation, even when subject to harsh conditions, and providing the requisite structural characteristics to fulfill the demands of industrial end uses. The cost of raw materials for plastic and composite plastic products can be expensive, however. Recycled plastic materials provide a more cost-efficient alternative to traditional virgin plastic raw material. However, recycled plastics and recycled composite plastic materials introduce variability in composition, and in turn, performance.
Recycled plastic materials generally comprise of HDPE (high-density polyethylene), PET (polyethylene terephthalate), PET/HDPE blends, PVC (polyvinyl chloride), polypropylene, and polystyrene, for example. Separating recycled materials according to resin type can be tedious and challenging, and thus expensive. Further difficulties may arise, in particular for composite plastic materials, in blending a comingled collection of different plastic types. Composite plastic materials that have been manufactured from a blend of comingled plastic types have at times exhibited disadvantageous characteristics, such as low-modulus of rupture and relative inflexibility.
Embodiments of the present technology are generally directed to industrial products manufactured from plastic materials, including virgin and recycled plastics, and methods for making the same. The embodiments of the present technology address the problems and deficiencies in the art, including those discussed herein. An embodiment of the industrial products of the present technology is a grooved composite block. The grooved block may be manufactured from one or more plastic materials, including a mixture of recycled plastic materials. The composite plastic material can be formed by: compressing one or more various types of plastic materials into a product mold, full melt molding, injection molding, extrusion molding, blow molding, semi-melt molding processes, rotational molding, or thermoforming. Additional features of exemplary embodiments will be described throughout, with reference to illustrative drawings.
The features of the technology will become more readily apparent, and may be better understood, by referring to the following detailed description and accompanying drawings, in which:
An embodiment of a grooved composite block 10 of the present technology is shown in
According to certain embodiments, the grooved composite block 10 may be shaped in a variety of geometries so as to provide variable cross-sectional geometries. For example, the grooved composite block 10 may be shaped such that its cross-section is, but not limited to, any of the following shapes: rectangular, triangular, hexagonal, trapezoidal, octagonal, square, “I”- shaped, “H”-shaped, “T”-shaped, and otherwise flanged geometries. The variable geometries provide advantageous structural integrity to the grooved composite block 10. Any of the aforementioned embodiments of the grooved composite block (e.g., variable geometric shapes) may contain grooves (e.g., one or more grooves on any surface and in any orientation, as described above).
The grooved composite block 10 of
The viscosity of the material entering the mold is a factor in compression and volume of plastic material in the mold. The higher the viscosity of the fluid, the more resistance there is to flow. In certain embodiments, having a lower viscosity can be advantageous in filling the mold. Plastic materials instantaneously decrease in viscosity with an increase in shear strain rate. Therefore, such materials flow more easily into the mold. Viscosity also contributes to the degree of interaction between the polymers of the plastic materials. A lower viscosity contributes to the polymers having a less voluminous shape and promotes better mixing of the polymers. The shear-thinning—i.e., the reduced viscosity produced by the increased shear strain rate—allows the high molecular mass molecules to be untangled and linearly oriented by the flow. At high shear strain rate and higher concentration, molecules may become more ordered and elastic. In such situations, the molecules have a less voluminous shape, which allows for better compression and higher concentration. Shear stress causes molecules to become stretched and compressed (at a right angle to stretch) resulting in a better orientation of the polymers.
According to embodiments of the present technology, using a grooved block mold helps to increase shear stress during the compression molding process. This increased shear stress produces a final grooved composite block with the beneficial properties discussed above (e.g., increased polymer entanglement, higher molecular weight).
In certain embodiments, any one or more of the surface plates (e.g., bottom plate 22 or side plates 24) may be removable or hinged. For instance, one or both end plates may be removable so as to enable the grooved composite block to be ejected from the mold upon completion of the compression process. Alternatively, one or more of the side plates of the grooved block mold may be hinged or otherwise removable to enable connected opening and ejection of the grooved composite block through a lateral side of the grooved block mold (as opposed to ejection of the grooved composite block through one of the ends of the grooved block mold.
The grooves in a finished composite block promote several benefits. The grooves reduce the cross-sectional area of the composite block, which allows the block to be made from less overall raw material and reduces manufacturing cost. As mentioned above, the increased in shear stress will increase entanglement and mixing of the plastic materials. The ribs in the mold decrease the volume, thus reducing the amount of recycled plastic material required to fill the mold. A reduction in raw material volume required to manufacture the final grooved composite block saves cost. After the grooved composite block is ejected from the mold, the block has more exposed surface area, which allows for more rapid transition of the polymeric material to its glass transition temperature (i.e., higher rate of cooling). The higher rate of cooling promotes more entanglement of the polymers from the recycled plastic materials.
The application of applying ribs in the molds to inherently produce grooves in the final product can be applied to any composite product manufactured through compression molding. In alternative embodiments, plastic materials may be melted (e.g., fully melted or semi-melted) into a liquid state and pressure injected into a block mold described above. In this way, embodiments of the grooved composite blocks described herein may be manufactured by extrusion processes or other full melt or semi-melt plastics manufacturing processes. One application of a grooved composite block, as described herein, is as a railroad tie. In that end use, the grooves create a product of similar cross-sectional area and section modulus, while at the same time provide a product that is lighter weight, that reduces stress in deflection under loading, and that exhibits higher lateral stability in ballasted track.
This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/821,874, filed Mar. 21, 2019, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62821874 | Mar 2019 | US |