Welcome to Plastic Recycling Guide
Recycling Time For Plastic Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Explaining a Different Process of Plastic Recycling
from:If you have done any studying about recycling plastic at all aside from just learning to put in a recycling bin, you have doubtless come across the growing debate and work on the different processes of plastic recycling. With plastics, all things are not created equal. Plastics with different uses often have wildly different chemical and polymer compositions. This means that they can’t be used for the same products and more importantly, can’t be recycled the same way. If a recycling center were to throw all of the various types of plastics into one recycling process, the end result would be a mess of plastics in various stages of melting and would likely look much like a culinary sauce gone wrong with water and oil separation. In other words, scientists and environmentalists have to come up with different processes for plastic recycling to get the job done.
One of the biggest new and different processes of plastic recycling is the work being done on biodegradable plastics. It seems like developing a plastic that could break down like a natural product is impossible, but more and more advances are being made on a regular basis. So far, one of the potential problems with this kind of new plastic is that if it is mixed up with recycled plastic, the quality of the resulting product suffers.
Recycling companies, most notably in the U.S., Australia, and Japan are tinkering with the idea of heat compression recycling for plastics. This version of a different process of plastic recycling works on the idea of taking all sorts and types of clean plastics, and we are talking about plastics from grocery bags to hard industrial plastics here, and placing them in the same tumbler. A tumbler is actually what it sounds like. It’s a gigantic rotating drum that is reminiscent of your clothes dryer tumbler and mixing the loads together. The benefit is that all plastics can be recycled this way regardless of their type. The biggest drawback is that this process takes a lot of energy to operate.
The world is still in its infant stage when it comes to safe, effective, and productive recycling especially when it comes to plastic recycling. A different process will help one type of plastic while it doesn’t work for another. Quite simply put it will take time, trial and error, and the dedication of a lot of people to get the processes where they need to be. In the meantime, it’s up to the everyday, ordinary people to continue to do the best job possible of recycling, reusing, and renewing.
Recycling Time For Plastic Specific links
Recycling Time For Plastic News
Brookline Recycling Corner: Plastic bags? Who you gonna ask?
A reader intimated to the Recycling Corner that she was wasting her time returning her plastic shopping bags to Stop & Shop. “You know they just throw them away,” she said with some conviction. Whoa! The Recycling Corner went straight to the store.
Read more...Recycling taking plastic bags
Plastic bags, the bane of the environmentally conscious everywhere, suddenly don’t appear so bad after all thanks to the recycling programs in Santa Barbara County.
Read more...WIU taking part in RecycleMania 2012
Did you know that recycling one ton of paper can save 17 trees? It’s easier than ever to recycle, especially at Western Illinois University, thanks to “co-mingled” recycling bins that allow consumers to throw their recyclables — bottles, cans, plastic and paper — into one bin. But a great way to do even more is through the annual RecycleMania contest, a national competition that pits colleges ...
Read more...Overcoming the challenges of SME recycling
Established infrastructure, simplified systems and greater cross-sector collaboration would enable small businesses to treat waste as a resource Small business owners often say that they would recycle more if there was an established infrastructure and it was easy to do so. In light of this, government departments launched the Business Waste and Recycling Services Commitment , making it easier ...
Read more...The problem of plastic
ONE issue which was brought up at Saturday s screening of Al Gore s film was that of plastic recycling. In Hitchin there is no council-owned plastic recycling centre and to get to the nearest site – the Household Waste Recycling Centre on Blackhorse Road,
Read more...


