1. Introduction
Thermoplastic glass fiber composites are light and have excellent mechanical properties and are therefore commonly used to form automotive components [
1,
2,
3]. In particular, the manufacturing of hybrid components that combine the advantages of organo sheets with the possibility of functionalization by using injection molding has gained significance over the last decade [
2]. The carrier (
Figure 1) was made of compressed woven glass fibers embedded in a thermoplastic matrix (organo sheet). This flat semi-preg has high strength and stiffness values combined with low density, and can be used in the thermal-forming process. Injection-molded elements made from long fiber thermoplastics granulate (LFT) can be produced in high quantities and easily functionalized. The injection-molding process combines the thermal forming of the organo sheet with the subsequent injection and overmolding of the LFT material. The result is a product that has the benefits of both processes. Continuously reinforced, pressed semi-preg products offer good stiffness. The material is used in injection molding to add functional elements such as functional carriers, ribs or edge structures made from LFT [
1,
4,
5,
6]. These hybrid components can be produced in large quantities at low cost, which qualifies them as a substitute for components made from steel and other composite materials [
2,
7]. The components are produced in a nesting process, in which the organo sheets are cut into the desired geometry using a load-adapted waterjet cutter. The nesting process, however precise, always produces waste offcut [
8].
There are different ways to treat this post-industrial waste. In the past, material waste with a high inorganic content was simply deposited in landfills. Due to European legislation, materials with an inorganic content above the threshold of 5 percent by weight may no longer be discarded in landfills. First, the material must be pretreated to reduce the inorganic content, which ejects greenhouse gases when scrapped. Incineration or co-incineration for cement production is the current means of waste treatment [
10,
11].
During incineration, the high calorific value of the waste is used to recover thermal energy, and the glass fibers end up partly in the slag [
12]. The latter is then deposited in a landfill site at high cost [
11]. However, some of the fiber material can cause problems during incineration and exhaust gas treatment. Therefore, co-incineration for cement production is the preferred solution for waste treatment. The material waste replaces the fossil energy needed to burn the lime, and the glass fiber is used as a filler in cement, which can be used as an ingredient in concrete [
2,
11,
13].
According to the waste hierarchy, recycling of the material must be assessed before any other recovery. Possible processes are feedstock and material recycling. Feedstock recycling includes processes such as solvolysis and pyrolysis. Solvolysis is a chemical decomposition process, in which the polymer matrix is dissolved resp. depolymerized by chemicals [
11,
14]. Pyrolysis, on the other hand, removes the polymer matrix by combustion, microwave-assisted heating or fluidized bed extraction [
11,
13,
14,
15]. In both processes, the end products can be further processed. Feedstock recycling processes are currently not industrially relevant, either because there are only pilot plants, the process costs are too high or the recycled materials have high impurities which requires a reprocessing of the recycled products [
11,
13,
15,
16].
Mechanical or material recycling of the offcuts is a promising recycling option. Depending on whether the material offcuts are recycled in the same process or in a different process, it is defined as closed-loop or open-loop recycling. In material recycling, the waste is first shredded, cut or ground. The recovered material can then be reused [
2,
11,
13,
14,
17,
18,
19,
20]. To demonstrate the mechanical recyclability of composites with thermoplastics, Otheguy et al. 2009 recycled the hull of a boat made from PP-GF laminate with a balsa wood core [
21]. Luinge and Warnet 2020 implemented shredded thermoplastic laminates as the middle layer in a new fiber composite laminate [
20]. A similar application was studied by Kiss et al. 2020. They compared the mechanical properties of sandwich laminates filled with shredded thermoplastic laminates with those of panel-molded compounds made of shredded thermoplastic laminates. The sandwich construction achieved better results due to the continuously reinforced top and bottom layers. Kiss et al. also tested the shredded material in injection molding and found a decrease in impact strength due to fiber abrasion [
19]. Further research has dealt with recycled thermoplastics composites and has compared two types of recycling materials, shredded laminates and cut semi-pregs with novel LFT pellets by processing in a low-shear mixer and subsequent compression molding [
17,
18]. The characteristics (fiber orientation, percolation, fiber attrition, etc.) of the recycled material were comparable to those of virgin glass-mat thermoplastics (GMT) products [
17]. Bernasconi et al. 2007 investigated the processing in injection molding, e.g., the admixture of short glass-fiber-reinforced polyamide 6.6 recycling material compared to virgin material with different portions of 0%, 25%, 50% and 100%. They specialized in the fatigue strength of the material mixtures [
22]. Evens et al. 2019 investigated the properties of components made of LFT granulates that have undergone up to ten recycling cycles. For the polypropylene with glass fiber, they found that the mechanical properties decrease with each recycling step due to fiber length degradation [
23].
This study incorporates the subsequent results as part of a research project that deals with closed-loop recycling, which investigates the recycling of offcuts from thermoplastic fiber composites with continuous reinforcement. The closed-loop recycling of a series-produced hybrid door module was used as an example. Here, organo sheet offcuts were fed directly into production in order to replace primary material for the injection molding of functional elements of the component. The continuous reinforcement of the offcuts promises high potential by achieving the longest fibers possible in manufactured components. This promotes high quality and material recycling where long-fiber glass material can be replaced with consistent mechanical properties. Currently, only short glass-fiber-recycled materials are available on secondary material markets; however, these do not fulfill the mechanical-property profile of the functional elements.
Two comminution methods for the production of recycled materials with long fibers, and their processability in the injection-molding process, were dealt with in this study. First, the mechanical properties of the recycled materials were analyzed and compared with reference materials available on the market. In the second step, optical and thermal analyses were carried out in order to be able to compare the properties in terms of fiber lengths and fiber content of the recycled material with the primary material. A correlation between the fiber analysis and the mechanical properties of the materials can be established with these two steps. In addition, the ecological and economic impact of closed-loop recycling was analyzed via a life cycle and profitability assessment. Closed-loop recycling of the offcuts can be recommended from an ecological and economic point of view, and the mechanical properties are also sufficient due to achievable fiber lengths.
2. Materials and Methods
A suitable strategy was developed for the recycling process of organo sheets, which was achieved by processing the nesting offcuts into recycling flakes by means of crushing processes. Two of these crushing processes were specifically compared. The crushed flakes were then introduced into the injection-molding process using a direct-injection-molding method, which serves as the functionalization of the hybrid component “hybrid door module”. The primary long-glass-fiber granulate was thus replaced. To ensure a glass fiber weight percentage of 30%, a base polymer and an adhesion promoter were added to the recycling organo sheet flakes.
2.1. Materials
The raw material used in this study is the organo sheet semi-preg (TEPEX Dynalite 104ms-RG601(1)/64mf% black Type S) from Bond-Laminates, consisting of 64 weight percentage of woven glass fibers and 36 wt.-% of the matrix material polypropylene (PP). Furthermore, a primary long-fiber injection material made of 30 wt.-% glass fibers and polypropylene, abbreviated as: LGF30 (GD301FE), which served as a reference for the experimental results, was provided by Borealis. A regranulated material from the company Wipag was used as the second reference material. This regranulated material was produced from organo sheet offcut. The regranulated material is a short glass fiber granulate with a 30 wt.-% glass fiber content based on polypropylene, abbreviated as: RG. By shredding the offcut of the organo sheet, the resulting material has a higher amount of glass fibers; when comparing it with the reference, it must be diluted with neat polypropylene (HJ120UB, Borealis). In addition, a coupling agent has to be used to achieve a better adhesion between the matrix and the fibers (WG068AE from Borealis).
2.2. Comminution Methods
Principles of cutting, punching or grinding are used for various comminution tasks in the industry. Examples of this can be seen in the production of gravel, crushed stone, common building materials, cement or coal. Such processes are used in the recycling of end-of-life products, e.g., clothes, tires, glass. Shredding is also necessary in the food industry and for the production of animal feed. Shaft shredders, hammer and impact mills, rotor shears, cutting mills or punches are often used. In plastics processing, thermoplastic production rejects or start-up materials can be grinded during batch changes and subsequently melted down.
In order to be able to process the organo sheet offcut in the injection-molding process, they have to be shredded to flakes. The challenge here is to get the recycling flakes as large as possible and yet as small as necessary. The size of the recycling flakes can adversely affect dosage and large flakes can clog the draw screw during processing. Another criterion for recycling flake dosage is the condition of the cut edges. Cutting edges should be as clean as possible and without protruding glass fiber to prevent bridging. Two comminution methods were chosen and compared to produce the following results.
Figure 2 shows an example of the composition of the recycling flakes produced by the two crushing processes.The first process is a customized tool system. Here, the flakes are punched into defined squares by means of a punch die. The size should ideally be 12 mm × 15 mm. As shown in
Figure 2a, the edges have been defined and no fibers should be peeking out. The result is so-called punched flakes. These flakes can be processed very adequately.
The second process is a 4-shaft shredder. Here, the flakes are shredded between counter-rotating shafts that are equipped with cutters, then specially perforated sieves are used to select the size. A perforated 20 mm sieve was used for this study. Shredded flakes were created (
Figure 2b) using this process. The edges of shredded flakes are well defined with only a few exposed fibers, which could lead to bridging in the dosing process. The shredded flakes have an inhomogeneous size distribution because of fractionation with a sieve.
2.3. Further Processing Methods
The injection-molding tests were carried out on a KraussMaffei injection-molding-machine (type: GVX 451 (DCIM), KraussMaffei Group GmbH, München, Germany) in the technical center of the Rosenheim University of Applied Sciences. The material combinations are fed to the plasticizing cylinder with a gravimetric-dosing system from Motan and injected to form multitest specimens. These series of tests were carried out with a three-zone screw (standard injection-molding process). The focus was on a process that simulates series production; therefore, all tests were carried out with conventional injection-molding processes.
The organo sheets have a glass fiber weight content of 64 wt.-%. For the functionalization in subsequent production components, a glass fiber weight percentage of 30% was to be achieved. For this purpose, a neat PP and an adhesion promoter were added to the recycling flakes to achieve the desired fiber content (
Figure 3). The recycling flakes, as well as the other components mentioned above, were added directly in the injection-molding process.
The recycling flakes as well as the other components mentioned were added directly in the injection-molding process.
Figure 4 clearly shows the examinations of the material combinations.
For material testing, multifunctional test specimens were produced and the mechanical properties were tested in accordance with common standards. In addition, initial fiber length analyses were carried out. The testing specimens were tested with the tensile test method according to DIN ISO 527-2 (Zwick/Roell type Z020/20kN, ZwickRoell GmbH & Co. KG, Ulm, Germany). Furthermore, an impact bending test (ZwickRoell-HIT50P/5J, ZwickRoell GmbH & Co. KG, Ulm, Germany) according to DIN ISO 179 was carried out. For the determination of the glass fiber content in the component, the samples were additionally ash-tested according to DIN EN ISO 1172.
The fiber length analysis was determined with the FibreShape CROSS system (from IST AG company, Ebnat-Kappel, Switzerland). For this purpose, the samples were first pyrolyzed and analyzed with FibreShape CROSS. Presentation of the measurement results was carried out according to ISO 9276. The fiber length degradation during the injection-molding process was analyzed, and samples were taken for analysis at three separate process points per test series.
Non-destructive images were taken with a computer tomograph (Werth Messtechnik GmbH, Gießen, Germany) for the optical evaluation. In order to achieve the highest possible resolution, and to get as close as possible to the tube, tension rods of the multitest specimens component were used. A section tomography was taken with an aluminum filter with a resolution of 4.5 µm voxel size.
2.3.1. Mass Flow
The list of mass flows based on the example of the production of a hybrid door module was used as a basis for the economic and ecological evaluation of the closed-loop process developed in the project, as well as for the evaluation of the proportion of recycled material that can be technically used in the example of the door carrier module carrier.
A mass flow calculation (related to one production year) was carried out. Taking into account an assumed reject rate of 5 wt.-% during the comminution of the organo sheet offcuts into regrind, a substitution of 32 wt.-% of the total gating material used by the recycled material (regrind) could be realized. A (neat) PP and a masterbatch (adhesion promoter) were added to the regrind (glass fiber weight content of 64%) to obtain a glass fiber weight content of 30% in the recycled material. The remaining 68 wt.-% of the total feedstock material used must be primary material (LGF30). The process and mass flows are shown schematically in
Figure 3.
Substitution potential of primary material, as well as a flat-rate scrap of 5 wt.-% of the regrind, was also taken into account in the following economic and ecological evaluation. During the technical implementation of the injection-molding testing at the Technical University of Applied Sciences Rosenheim, series of tests were carried out with a proportion of 33 wt.-% recycled material. Multifunctional test specimens were used to perform extensive mechanical testing on recycled materials for these test series.
In the case of the door carrier module, a maximum attainable recycled-material content of 35 wt.-% resulted from the mass flow calculation (33 wt.-% is used in the tests). Other components may also have higher recycled content, which is why a recycled content of 67% or a complete substitution of the primary material (100% recycled content) were also used as comparative values in the test series. These test series were conducted and compared with both comminution methods.
2.3.2. Influence Cutting Sand
The organo sheets were cut using an abrasive waterjet-cutting process designed for the hybrid component production process. However, this resulted in impurities of organo sheet offcuts. An additional cleaning process for the offcuts would not be logistically or economically advantageous. Therefore, additional test series were carried out to investigate the influence of contamination on the mechanical properties of the recycled materials. These tests were performed exclusively with punched flakes. Images were taken with a Tescan scanning electron microscope (SEM) (Tescan type: MIRA3, TESCAN GmbH, Dortmund, Germany) for the optical assessment of the cutting sand and the contamination after waterjet cutting.
4. Conclusions
In this article, a mechanical recycling of organo sheet offcut was investigated with two different comminution methods: shredding and punching. Regarding tensile and impact strength as well as fiber length, both methods provided material with good properties fit for injection-molding processes to produce a hybrid component. The offcuts were made of continuous fiber-reinforced thermoplastics and allowed for the fiber length required for functionalization. As a result, this recycled material can technically compete with virgin material. Furthermore, the profitability analysis revealed a good return on investment while the life cycle assessment showed a reduction in environmental impact through the recycling of the offcut.
In conclusion, the circulation of the material produced by the cutting process of the organo sheets is a good technical solution for industrial waste. Virgin material can be substituted with recycled which reduces resources, costs and the impact on the environment.
Further investigations could focus on the production of the longest fibers possible in the continuous fiber-reinforced thermoplastics. The optimization of feed-screw geometry and machine configuration could deliver even better mechanical results than were achieved in this study. Recycling valuable and high-quality materials such as organo sheets would become even more advantageous.
Further research should address the scaling of the closed-loop recycling process and reliable supply chains for recycled materials which are required to bring these measures into a series production process.