Our busy modern lives disconnect us from all sorts of things - how food is grown,
how goods are produced, our waste dealt with, and the processes behind recycling.
The following is a brief overview how some products are recycled past the point of extraction from the waste stream.
Aluminum can recycling process
After arriving at a smelter and inspected, the crushed aluminum cans
are shredded. The pieces are then heated to remove the paint and any
moisture, after which
the material passes over fine screens to remove contaminants.
The material is then heated to melting point (around 600C) and
chemicals added to separate more impurities that are then skimmed off.
Aluminium and other metals may then be added to bring molten material
to the required alloy specification.
The molten aluminum is poured into very large ingots and once cooled
and cleaned, sent through rollers multiple times until a thin sheet is
produced; which can then be remade into cans.
It's an energy intensive process, but the
recycling energy savings are around 95% compared to mining and smelting from new raw
materials and aluminium can be recycled an unlimited number of times.
Steel can recycling process
After arriving at a steel smelter, bales of crushed cans are placed in
a furnace with other recyclable steel. Molten iron is added and oxygen
is pumped into the furnace which heats up to around 1700 degrees
Celsius for 30 minutes. By the end of this time, impurities have been
driven or skimmed off.
The molten steel is poured into large ingots, then go through multiple
rollers while still very hot until the desired thickness is achieved
for making products such as cans.
While the steel can recycling process doesn't have as many stages as
aluminium cans, much higher temperatures are used therefore requiring
more energy. Regardless, the
recycling
energy savings are around 62 - 74%. Steel can be recycled over and over in
this way.
Plastic soda bottles and bottled water containers
This deals specifically with PETE (or PET) plastics (
plastic
resin code 1).
The bottles are first inspected for foreign materials then sorted into
colors. The bottles are then sterilised, crushed and chopped into
flakes.
The flakes undergo another separation and cleaning process to remove
remaining foreign materials. The flakes are then chemically reverse
engineered by either methanolysis or glycolosis, which can restore the
material to the original raw materials and then blended to create new
PET.
The
recycling energy savings of plastic soda and water bottles is around 90%.
Glass bottle and jar recycling process
Glass bottles are separated by color and then broken into small pieces,
usually at a recycling center, in order to cut down on volume for
shipping. They are then transported to a bottle making plant where the
material is crushed. Magnets, filters and vacuums remove foreign
objects such as
labels and metals. The cleaned powdered glass, known as cullet, is
mixed with raw materials and placed in a furnace which melts it into
molten glass; ready to be formed into new bottles and jars.
Glass
recycling uses only two-thirds the energy needed to manufacture glass from raw materials.
Paper recycling process
The paper is sorted according to quality and then shipped to a paper
mill where water is added in order to turn it into a pulp. Foreign
matter is then removed by various filters and screens. Chemicals are
added to remove the ink from the pulp.
Depending on the type of process, de-inking can be a simple detergent
process or
one that may involve chlorine or other more harmful chemicals depending
on the
ink being removed. The ink used in newspapers and packaging these days
is usually
soy-based, however, copy machine and laser printed document "ink" is a
plastic polymer burned onto the page which requires harsher processes
to remove.
Once de-inked, pulp is then flushed with more water and air is injected
to form an inky foam which is skimmed. The remaining water is drained
and reused. The pulp is then bleached - more often with
hydrogen peroxide these days as chlorine can combine with organic materials to form
dioxins - one of the most deadly of man-made poisons.
More
chemicals may be added at that point and the final pulp is either
pressed into sheets and dried or mixed in with virgin pulp.
Recycling paper uses about
60% less energy than making paper from new
materials; however, each time paper is recycled, it loses quality - so in effect
it is really
downcycled
each time. Given the wide range of processes that may be used, not all recycled
paper is created equal from an environmental aspect - a topic I'll address in
more detail in a future article.
Another product often recycled is motor oil - most people don't realize
that motor oil can be fully recycled into new motor oil as it never
wears out; it just gets dirty. I describe the
motor oil recycling process
here.
As
you can see from above - recycling isn't all that straightforward and
there can be a lot of chemicals involved. We all need to continue
recycling of course, but reducing consumption is equally as important.
For example, perhaps next time you feel like a can of soda, consider
heading to the tap for a glass of water instead. Instead of buying a
newspaper, duck online and read it there.
I'll be adding more "how X is recycled" to this article in the time
ahead, so if you have suggestions about products you would like to see
covered or expanded upon, please let me know by posting a comment
below.