In recent years, environmental concerns about the amount of electronic waste (e-waste) plastic being dumped in landfills have met with rising interest. The proliferation of computers, cellular telephones and other electronic devices using plastic components has proliferated.
Many plastic products have been recycled, although on a smaller than desirable small scale. One of the difficulties in recycling e-waste plastic materials is that the large quantities of the same types of plastic materials are difficult to obtain. Further, the recycling collection process generally lumps all plastic parts or products together thereby preventing easy separation of the different types of plastics.
Another recycling trend that has been initially taken place in Europe is the requirement for the manufacturers of certain e-waste plastic parts, particular computer and cellular telephone parts, to take back the product at the end of its useful life for recycling.
In view of the trend toward increased plastic recycling and the difficulties currently involved in successfully recycling e-waste plastics at high volumes, it is desirable to provide a method of recycling e-waste plastic and manufacturing products from such recycled plastic.
A method of recycling products made from e-waste thermoplastic material into new products and products made by such a method are disclosed.
In one aspect, the method of recycling products made from e-waste thermoplastic material includes the steps of:
breaking down plastic parts into smaller particulates;
converting the plastic particulates into semi-molten mass; and
molding the semi-molten mass to form a new product.
The step of breaking down the e-waste plastic parts into particulates may include the steps of cutting the plastic parts into smaller pieces, and using at least one of a tumbling operation and a grinding operation to reduce the small pieces into smaller particulates.
During the grinding operation, the temperature of the small sized plastic parts are maintained below the melting point of the plastic parts by the injection of cold air during the grinding process.
In one aspect, a first stream of plastic parts formed of computer and printer parts formed substantially of ABS plastic is provided. A second, separate material stream is employed for printer ink cartridges to reduce the ink cartridges into small particulates and to separate the foam ink insert from the plastic particulates.
According to one aspect, the materials from the first and second material streams are stored in separate silos. Selected quantities range between 0 and 100% of each of the first and second material streams are transferred to a blender which weighs the material and forms a blended mass in the selected percentage of the first and second material particulates.
The blended mass is then transferred to a compounder which reduces the particulates of the blended mass into a semi-molten state.
According to one aspect, the semi-molten mass from the compounder is transferred in a carrier which is surrounded with a ventilation apparatus to remove emissions and particulates from the semi-molten mass. The semi-molten mass is then transferred to a mold to form an end product.
In another aspect, a product is made according to the above-described method. The product may, for example, be employed as a base or substrate for a road sign or any other signage. Decorative indicia is applied to one surface of the substrate in the form of a decorative film or printed directly on the surface of the substrate to complete the sign. The substrate may also be molded to its final shape without decorative indicia for other applications, such as landscape, stepping stones, etc.
The various features, advantages and other uses of the present e-waste plastic recycling method and manufactured product will become more apparent by referring to the following detailed description and drawing in which:
The following is a description of an e-waste plastic recycling method and a product manufactured by the recycling method. The recycling method is particularly designed for manufacturing products made from recycled e-waste plastic, such as e-waste plastic from hard plastic computer parts and inkjet cartridges.
The following recycling method and resulting manufactured products will be described as being made from ABS plastic which is typically used to form rigid computer parts, such as computer and printer housings, and spent ink cartridges. It will be understood that the inventive method may also employ other types of rigid plastic, such as various thermoplastic materials including polycarbonate, polystyrene, SAN (styrene-acrylonitrile), and polyvinylchloride (PVC). Suitable thermoplastics may also be crystalline, namely, acetal, nylon, polyethylene, polypropylene and polyesters, or liquid cyrstalline plastics. Other suitable thermoplastics may include polyvinylchloride (PVC), acrylics, fluoropolymers and polymides. Mixtures and copolymers of these materials may also be used in practicing the inventive method.
Computers and inkjet cartridges arrive at the manufacturing site and are dissembled and sorted into bulk e-waste plastic 10 and ink cartridges 12 as shown in
In a first plastic material recycling stream, the computer, printer, or other rigid e-waste plastic parts 10 are conveyed by a modified conveyor 14 to a tumbler 16, which, by example only, can be a model no. 136AZ-45 tumbler manufactured by Shred Pax, Inc., Wood Dale, Ill. The tumbler 16, shown in greater detail in
The material is then conveyed by conveyor 18; see
From the grinder 20, the granular plastic is transferred by an enclosed, custom fabricated auger 22, shown in detail in
In a separate, parallel, second plastic material recycling stream, the bulk printer ink cartridges 12 are placed on a conveyor 30, shown in
Via a customized, enclosed auger 25,
The granular pieces are then transferred from the chipper/grinder 34 to a modified shaker table 36, shown in
As shown in
The foam pieces 37, shown in
The ground plastic material in the silos or hoppers 24 and 40 can be transferred either manually or by an automated program via enclosed augers 46 and 48 to a blender or mixer machine 50 as shown in
The percentage of either of the first and second plastic streams may range from 0% to 100% and will be chosen in accordance with the property requirements of the end product. By way of example only, when the end product is a landscaping stepping stone, the material from the hoppers 24 and 40 is selected in a 75% clean plastic/25% dirty plastic ratio, by way of example only. It will be understood that other ratios may also be employed, depending upon the use requirements of the end product, the availability of computer and printer housings and ink jet printer cartridges, as well as for material flexibility and end product consistency.
The blender 50 also enables color to be provided in the end product. This can be achieved by mixing separate amounts of colorant in the blender 50. Alternately, by way of example only, a selected color of the end product can be obtained by forming the plastic particulates in one or both of the hoppers 24 and 40 of the selected color plastic, such as green, blue etc.
According to the selected control program in the blender 50, varying amounts of either or both of the two plastic material types 10 and 12 are drawn from the respective silos 24 and 40 and carried up to a hopper 52 above the blender 50 through custom engineered augers 46 and 48, as shown in
The blender 50 is a custom fabricated WSB series weigh scale blender made by L-R Systems of Joliet, Ill. The blender 50 is designed to mix the two components according to one of 99 recipes loaded into a memory. Materials are individually metered by auger feeders 46 and 48 into the batch mixing drum of the blender 50 until a recipe base set point is reached. The material drops from the hopper 52 into the mixing chamber of the blender 50 where the materials are then blended together.
In a process where only one of the first and second plastic streams is used, the blender 50 may or may not be employed. Since only one plastic stream is employed, the blender is not required to provide the function of blending plastic particles from two different plastic streams. However, the blender 50 may still be employed in this situation for its preset batch quantity selection capability.
After a batch is completed, a mixing timer, which can be set between 0 and 60 seconds, starts timing. After the conclusion of the set mixing time period, the timer opens the slide gate to dump the mixing barrel into a collection bin or enclosed holding tank 54 of the blender 50. The slide gate then closes enabling the blender 50 to start the next batch based on any material recipe.
When the materials are needed, the materials are transferred by an enclosed auger 55 to a hopper 56 which is located directly over a custom engineered compounder 58 shown in
Prior to compounding, the material drawn from the holding tank 54 is weighed on an inline scale 60,
After emulsification, a carrier or tray 53 holding the emulsified plastic material descends below the compounder 58 behind a curtain 61 and vent hood 63 shown in
Above the curtain 61 is a two foot draw fan ducted up to a second three foot draw fan located in the ceiling of the manufacturing facility. Exhaust exits the duct stack at 4,500 cubic feet per minute.
The operator waits for a few seconds to remove the material from the compounder output tray to maximize the emissions captured by the vent hood 63. The curtain 61 and vent hood trap 63 approximately 100 percent of the particulates and VOC emissions during heating of the plastic material during the compounding process. A small percent of the total emissions may be released into the compounder room during the transfer of the material from the compounder output tray.
After waiting the prescribed few seconds, the operator reaches through the curtain 61 and removes the output tray containing the emulsified recycled e-waste material.
The material is then manually transferred to a mold 62 in one of a plurality of presses 64. The presses 64 can be hydraulic presses, for example. The presses 64 are cooled by a 15 ton customized Zarsky chiller 65, model no ACWC-180-E, for example, which keeps the mold cool during the molding process to set the final plastic product. The chiller 65 is housed separately from the presses 64 as shown in
For certain types of molds, a combination of heating and cooling is required. The control of the timing and the exact combination of heating and cooling is executed by a control system 67 connected to the chiller and each press 64 as shown in
After the plastic product has been set in the final shape, the product is released from the mode and placed on waiting tables 68, as shown in
After passing inspection, the final product 69 is placed in a distribution staging area to be palletized and shrink wrapped for shipment to the customer.
The product made from the recycled e-waste plastic according to the present process can take a number of different shapes. For example, as shown in
Alternately, the road sign indicia, or any other sign indicia for which the substrate is employed, can be printed, using available printing techniques, directly on one surface of the substrate 74. The applied coating may be reflective, partially reflective, or non-reflective, depending upon the purpose and use of the sign.
It is also possible to utilize the substrate 74, with or without indicia applied to one surface as the final end product. For example, the substrate 74 can be shaped and used as a landscaping stepping stone.
This application claims priority benefit to the May 17, 2010 filing date of pending U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/345269, the entire contents which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61345269 | May 2010 | US |