New Biodegradable Materials for Re-Thought Packaging from Pre-Consumer Wastes by Controlling the Storage Time as Method to Increase the Mechanical Recycling Efficiency
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Methods
2.2. Materials
2.3. Characterization
2.3.1. Rheological Properties in the Melted State
2.3.2. DSC
2.3.3. TGA
2.3.4. FTIR
2.3.5. Mechanical Characterization
3. Results
3.1. Melt Rheological Properties
3.1.1. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from the PET-CW Resulted from Manufacture of Films Flexographically Printed with Black (PM2) and Primary Compound (F2) Used in this Production
3.1.2. Mechanically Recycled Compound from PET-CW Formed during the Manufacture of Unprinted Films (PM3) and Primary Compound (F3) Used in this Production
3.1.3. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from Pre-Consumer Waste from the Mass Manufacture of Green-Colored Film (PM4) and Primary Compound (F4) Used in this Production
3.2. Thermal Behavior
3.2.1. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from Pre-Consumer Waste Formed fromthe Manufacture of Films Flexographically Printed with Black (PM2) and Primary Pellets Used in this Production (F2) (Figure 5, Table 4, Table 5, Table 6, Table 7, Table 8, Table 9 and Table 10)
3.2.2. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from Pre-Consumer Waste Formed during the Manufacture of Non-Printed Films (PM3) and Primary Compound (F3) Used in this Production (Figure 6, Table 4, Table 5, Table 6, Table 7, Table 8, Table 9 and Table 10)
2nd Heating | Glass Transition 1 | Glass Transition2 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Onset | Tg | End | ΔCp | Onset | Tg | End | ΔCp | |
°C | °C | °C | J/(g·°C) | °C | °C | °C | J/(g·°C) | |
F2 | −41.3 | −35.5 | −30.9 | 0.21 | 40.7 | 54.8 | 59.1 | 0.09 |
F3 | −42.6 | −37.9 | −32.0 | 0.18 | 43.4 | 55.2 | 60.0 | 0.09 |
F4 | −41.6 | −36.2 | −30.9 | 0.19 | 46.8 | 55.6 | 60.2 | 0.11 |
2nd Heating | Enthalpy 2 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Onset2 | Tm2 | ΔH2 | |
°C | °C | J/g | |
F2 | 83.4 | 113.3 | 6.96 |
F3 | 86.7 | 114.2 | 7.16 |
F4 | 86.2 | 113.9 | 6.78 |
2nd Heating | Glass Transition | Enthalpy 1 | Enthalpy 2 | ΔH1 + ΔH2 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Onset | Tg | End | ΔCp | Onset1 | Tm1 | ΔH1 | Onset2 | Tm2 | ΔH2 | ||
°C | °C | °C | J/(g·°C) | °C | °C | J/g | °C | °C | J/g | J/g | |
PM2 | −41.6 | −36.5 | −30.8 | 0.20 | 21.4 | 85.1 | 5.60 | 89.2 | 122.5 | 8.72 | 14.32 |
PM3 | −41.6 | −37.1 | −30.8 | 0.19 | 34.9 | 79.1 | 4.12 | 91.2 | 120.7 | 8.61 | 12.72 |
PM4 | −43.0 | −36.4 | −32.2 | 0.20 | 30.2 | 74.5 | 2.77 | 78.8 | 122.7 | 11.32 | 14.09 |
Cooling | Crystallization | ||
---|---|---|---|
Onset | Tc | ΔHc | |
°C | °C | J/g | |
PM2 | 99.5 | 90.2 | 8.95 |
PM3 | 97.1 | 85.4 | 9.13 |
PM4 | 115.8 | 103.4 | 8.39 |
Cooling | Crystallization | ||
---|---|---|---|
Onset | Tc | ΔHc | |
°C | °C | J/g | |
F2 | 67.8 | 59.8 | 8.86 |
F3 | 72.0 | 62.0 | 9.51 |
F4 | 70.1 | 61.5 | 9.62 |
Code/Prop | RT-175 °C | 175–340 °C | 340–465 °C | 465–530 °C | 530–720 °C | Residue at 720 °C | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Wt. Loss | N2 | Air | |
% | °C | % | °C | % | °C | % | % | % | % | |
F2 | 1.50 | 108.9 | 24.55 | 310.4 | 68.64 | 404.3 | 0.81 | 0.44 | 4.05 | 0.24 |
F3 | 1.35 | 128.1 | 25.37 | 309.2 | 65.02 | 406.3 | 1.26 | 0.77 | 6.23 | 0.41 |
F4 | 2.31 | 118.4 | 22.90 | 305.3 | 67.43 | 406.3 | 1.11 | 0.67 | 5.58 | 0.37 |
Code/Prop. | RT—175 °C | 175 °C–345 °C | 345 °C–485 °C | 485 °C–630 °C | 630 °C–750 °C | Residue at 750 °C | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wt. Loss | Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Tmax | Wt. Loss | Tmax | N2 | Air | |
% | % | °C | % | °C | % | °C | % | °C | % | % | |
PM2 | 1.77 | 23.38 | 323.2 | 62.52 | 398.6 | 3.72 | 579.2 | 3.10 | 688.0 | 5.51 | 5.49 |
PM3 | 1.80 | 25.54 | 324.8 | 62.14 | 398.8 | 4.21 | 581.4 | 3.96 | 691.7 | 2.35 | 2.19 |
PM4 | 1.89 | 22.82 | 323.8 | 64.96 | 398.2 | 4.70 | 583.9 | 3.53 | 677 | 2.10 | 1.98 |
3.2.3. Mechanically Recycled Compound from Pre-Consumer Waste Generated fromthe Mass Manufacture of Green-Colored Films (PM4) and Primary Compound (F4) Used in this Production (Figure 7, Table 4, Table 5, Table 6, Table 7, Table 8, Table 9 and Table 10)
3.3. Chemical Structure
Functional Group | Wavenumber, cm−1 |
---|---|
a. From compounds | |
−OH –NH and/or –NH4+ | 3394 cm−1, 3335 cm−1, 3313 cm−1, 1631 cm−1, 652 cm−1, 647 cm−1, 615 cm−1, 611 cm−1 3200 cm−1 |
–CH3 | 2953 cm−1, 2874 cm−1 |
–CH din –CH2 | 2921 cm−1, 2850 cm−1 |
C=O | 1754 cm−1, 1725 cm−1 shoulder, 1713 cm−1 |
–C=C– unsaturated | 1646 cm−1, 1631 cm−1 |
–C=C– unsaturated from the aromatic ring –Aromatic ring | 1578 cm−1505 cm−1 |
–CH from –CH2 –CH2 and/or –O–CH | 1467 cm−1, 1454 cm−1, 1410 cm−1, 1392 cm−1, 1366 cm−1 1321 cm−1 |
–C–C(O)–O | 1269 cm−1, 1252 cm−1 |
–C–O–C and/or –(O)–OH –CH aromatic C–O | 1252 cm−1, 1160 cm−1, 1119 cm−1 1103 cm−1, 1080 cm−1, 868 cm−1 |
–C–CH3 and/or C–OH –C–C –C–O –C–C– –CH2 of chain | 1080 cm−1, 1027 cm−1, 1018 cm−1, 935 cm−1, 759 cm−1 1018 cm−1 936 cm−1 868 cm−1 874 cm−1 729 cm−1 |
b. From the compounds’ components | |
Starch [23] | 3600–3300 cm−1 OH; 2931 cm−1 C–O C–O 1637–1458 cm−1 CH2 1385–1375 cm−1 C–H1149 cm−1 C–O–C 1200–800 cm−1 C–O 920 cm−1 856 cm−1 758 C cm−1–O–C ring vibration |
PCL [24] | 3600 cm−1–3400 cm−1 -OH; 3000 cm−1–2800 cm−1–CH3, CH2, CH; C=O 1730 cm−1 |
PBAT [24,25] | 3000 cm−1 alcohol OH; 1735 cm−1–1725 cm−1 C=O from ester; 1256 cm−1 C-O from ester; 901 cm−1–700 cm−1 benzene ring, 726 cm−1 4 adjacent –CH2– |
Carbon black [26] | –COOH at 1720 cm−1, –C(O) –O–C(O), –(–C(=O)–O) 1735 cm−1, –C(O) –H 1700 cm−1 |
Phthalocyanine [25] | NH AT 3289 cm−1 1006 cm−1, 3074 cm−1 3048 cm−1–CH asymmetric, 2923 cm−1 2854 cm−1–CH symmetric, 1609 cm−1 C–C in pyrrole, 1428 cm−1 1332 cm−1 C–C in isoindole 625 macro cycle ring 1517 cm−1 1490 cm−1 1478 cm−1 C–H in aryl 1184 cm−1 1164 cm−1 1070 cm−1 C–N in isoindole |
3.3.1. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from the Pre-Consumer Waste from the Manufacture of Films Flexographically Printed with Black (PM2) and from the Primary Pellets Used in this Production (F2) (Figure 8)
3.3.2. Mechanically Recycled Compounds from Pre-Consumer Waste Formed from Manufacture of Films (PM3) and Primary Pellets (F3) Used in this Production (Figure 9)
3.3.3. Mechanically Recycled Compound from Pre-Consumer Waste Formed from Mass Manufacture of Colored Film (PM4) and Primary Compound (F4) Used in this Production (Figure 10)
3.4. Mechanical Properties
4. Discussion
- the FTIR changes, which may have been a consequence of degradation via the breaking of macromolecular chains and of intermolecular bonds with more or less involvement of functional groups corresponding to each polymer from the studied compounds;
- the 2–5-times greater melt fluidity of all the mechanically recycled compounds, most likely being due to the PRE-CW degradation through chain breaking during storage, with the molecular weight decreasing;
- the melting of mechanically recycled polymers in successive processes, over the entire range of positive temperatures up to 120 °C, compared to a single melt, which had a relatively narrow end with a maximum at almost 120 °C. This behavior could be a result of the compositional de-mixing following the chain breaking and the alteration of the intermolecular interactions because of the storage degradation of the PET-CW;
- the crystallization of mechanically recycled compounds at 20 °C–35 °C higher temperatures than the primary compounds, possibly because of a large number of short chains appearing via chain breaking, which had a greater mobility and crystallized much more easily.
- the thermal degradation of the recycled compounds with the formation of slightly more stable compounds with the movement of the TGA degradation steps towards higher values and with a greater amount of residue at the end of the process, at 750 °C (stable compounds in air).
5. Conclusions
- 1.
- It was demonstrated that the pre-consumer waste (PRE-CW) from the manufacture of multilayer packaging films starting from starch-, PCL-, and PBAT-based compounds cannot be stored before mechanical recycling, especially in uncontrolled conditions.In spaces without ventilation, during the hot, rainy summers with alternating scorching heat and rain in these unventilated spaces, conditions similar to composting are created. Temperatures around 50 °C–60 °C enable enzymatic hydrolysis on the PET-CW surface, probably at the glycosidic linkages from starch and the esters from PCL (a polymer with a melting temperature of 60 °C) and PBAT. Once the sitesof destruction are created, then it propagates into the mass. Storage time accelerates the destruction that is also possibly due to the physical aging, which in turn can be enhanced by chemical degradation.
- 2.
- The degradation was highlighted by:
- the FTIR changes, which may be the consequence of some destruction processes, with the breaking of the macromolecular chains’, destruction of intermolecular bonds and/or more or less involvement of functional groups corresponding to each polymer from the studied compounds;
- the 2–5-times greater melt fluidity of all the mechanically recycled compounds, which was most likely due to the PET-CW degradation during storage with the molecular weight decreasing through chain breaking;
- the melting of mechanically recycled compounds in successive processes over the entire range of positive temperatures up to 120 °C, compared to melting with a single, relatively narrow endotherm with a maximum at almost 120 °C. This behavior can be a result of the partial compositional de-mixing following the alteration of the intermolecular interactions and/or the chain breaking, and of the storage degradation of PET-CW;
- the crystallization of mechanically recycled compounds at 20 °C–35 °C higher temperatures than the primary compounds, which was possible because of the large number of short chains appearing via chain breaking, which had a greater mobility and crystallized much more easily;
- the thermal degradation of recycled compounds with the formation of slightly more stable compounds with the movement of the TGA temperature steps towards higher values and with greater amounts of residues at the end of the process, at 750 °C (stable compounds in air).
- 3.
- The coloring did not introduce spectacular differences between the studied properties of the mechanically recycled pellets compared to the primary ones, possibly because of the very small amounts of dyes used. The flexographic printing with carbon black did not induce variations other than those recorded in the case for the uncolored recycled compound.
- 4.
- In order to make the mechanical recycling of starch- and biodegradable-polyester-based compounds for packaging films more efficient, the PET-CW must be immediately mechanically recycled without storage. This method avoids both chemical degradation and the physical aging, which can reciprocally potentiate each other much more the longer the storage time.
- 5.
- Mechanical recycling can also be made more efficient by drying the primary granules prior to mechanical recycling, and/or through the optimal selection of working conditions to ensure protection (low and medium temperatures, medium shear speeds) and the immediate recycling of waste.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Code | Fraction of PRE-CW after Color Separation | Coloring | MFI x, g/10 min |
---|---|---|---|
PM2 | Flexographic printing with black | Carbon black | 10.1 |
PM3 | Unprinted, uncolored | - | 14.2 |
PM4 | Bulk coloring | Phthalocyanine blue | 14.8 |
Code\Properties | Properties of Primary Compounds 2x | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Density (ρ) g/cm3 | Fluidity (MFI) 3x, g/10 min | Melting Temp., °C | Break Tensile Strength, (σbr), MPa | Elongation at Break, (ε), % | |
F2 | 1.29 | 3 | 118 | 30 | 450 |
F3 | 1.27 | 4.5 | 117 | 35 | 485 |
F4 | 1.28 | 3 | 115 | 30 | 390 |
CODE | The Variation of the Fluidity Increment in the Ranges of 130 °C–170 °C and 2.16–10 kg Load for Mechanically Recycled Pre-Consumer Wastes and Primary Compounds | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
g/10 min | g/10 min | |||
2.16 kg–5 kg | 10 kg | 2.16 kg–5 kg | 10 kg | |
I. Films with surfaceflexographically printed with black pigments | ||||
PM2 | 1–8 | 13–13.5 | 140–150 °C: 2–5 160–170 °C: 2–6 | 140–150 °C: 9–10 160–170 °C: 2–14 |
F2 | 1–4 | 140–150 °C: 12 160–170 °C: 1–4 | 140–150 °C: 1.5–4.5 160–170 °C: 1–2 | 140–150 °C: 1–2 160–170 °C: 10–11 |
II. Colorless film | ||||
PM3 | 1–6 | 13.5–16 | 0.5–6 | 4–16 |
F3 | 0.5–2 | 7.5–9.5 | 0.2–2 | 1.5–4.5 |
III. Mass colored films (green pigments) | ||||
PM4 | 1–6 | 11.5–18 | 1–6.5 | 5.5–18 |
F4 | 0.5–5.5 | 11–15 | 0.9–6 | 5–8.5 |
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Dimonie, D.; Dragne, M.; Trica, B.; Nicolae, C.-A.; Raduly, M.; Doncea, S.; Ladaniuc, M.; Mustatea, A.; Miu, F.; Soare, L.; et al. New Biodegradable Materials for Re-Thought Packaging from Pre-Consumer Wastes by Controlling the Storage Time as Method to Increase the Mechanical Recycling Efficiency. Materials 2023, 16, 1503. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16041503
Dimonie D, Dragne M, Trica B, Nicolae C-A, Raduly M, Doncea S, Ladaniuc M, Mustatea A, Miu F, Soare L, et al. New Biodegradable Materials for Re-Thought Packaging from Pre-Consumer Wastes by Controlling the Storage Time as Method to Increase the Mechanical Recycling Efficiency. Materials. 2023; 16(4):1503. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16041503
Chicago/Turabian StyleDimonie, Doina, Mihail Dragne, Bogdan Trica, Cristian-Andi Nicolae, Monica Raduly, Sanda Doncea, Magda Ladaniuc, Alina Mustatea, Florentina Miu, Laurentiu Soare, and et al. 2023. "New Biodegradable Materials for Re-Thought Packaging from Pre-Consumer Wastes by Controlling the Storage Time as Method to Increase the Mechanical Recycling Efficiency" Materials 16, no. 4: 1503. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16041503
APA StyleDimonie, D., Dragne, M., Trica, B., Nicolae, C. -A., Raduly, M., Doncea, S., Ladaniuc, M., Mustatea, A., Miu, F., Soare, L., & Georgescu, T. (2023). New Biodegradable Materials for Re-Thought Packaging from Pre-Consumer Wastes by Controlling the Storage Time as Method to Increase the Mechanical Recycling Efficiency. Materials, 16(4), 1503. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16041503