Friday, December 27, 2024

Your Questions About Recycling

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Filed under Recycling Q & A

Lisa asks…

Hypothetical question on recycling plastics?

I know how hard it is to recycle plastics, like bags and bottles and such. DO you think there is an efficent and economical way to partially melt or adhere plastics together to make like commerical fenceposts, bricks, or wall materials with out harmful side effects, leeching, high energy output to make them? If we were to just walk around gathering plastic bags, bottles and other stuff that clogg landfills and take hundreds of years to decay is this s resource we could scientifically use for building material?
Wendy and Others I am not STUPID I know they are recycled all the time, but not ALL plastic items are recylable or the process in how they do it is NOT efficient. I am asking is there an efficent less polluting way to melt and adhere plastics together to make a strong durable, cheap, easy to use material. I am aware of Orcaboard and those things but I DOUBT there way of recycling this stuff is very enviromentally healthy

The Expert answers:

There are two types of plastics; Thermoplastic plastics, and thermoset plastics.

Thermoplastics are recyclable to a limited extent. The long chains that give the plastic it’s desirable properties tend to bind or break every time the plastic is recycled, so it can only be recycled for the same use to a limited extent.

Thermosets, and recycled thermoplastics can be somewhat reduced by solvents, but the solvents themselves are usually harmful to the environment. The resulting gels from these solvents are not always useful either.

In the facility where I work, we manufacture Polyurethane, a thermoset plastic, as part of a total production process. The scrap polyurethane is disposed of at cement factories where it is burned to turn limestone components into cement. I believe there is some work in ultrasonics to try to better recycle these materials, but it currently takes much more energy to reduce these plastics to their base components than it takes to simply make new plastics. I am sure that eventually it will be cheaper to recycle.

Betty asks…

How do I recycle plastics.?

Do I have remove the labels? Do I have to removed the colored plastic cap?

What if they are different shapes and sizes? Can I put them all together?

Can I put the clear plastics (like for soda) with unclear plastics (like for punch) together?

Can I take it to the little stations outside of supermarkets to recycle? I know they recycle cans.

The Expert answers:

They recycle by the grade of the plastic. All your water and soda bottles are a #1 plastic (look on the bottom of container and there is a # 1-7 inside a triangle. Most places will not pay you for your milk jugs. Bring all materials to recycler and he/she will help you. Once or twice and you’ll be a pro!! Oh, you dont have to remove labels or caps.

John asks…

Can I recycle the plastic McDonalds cups?

McDonalds has large Coke’s for a dollar and I just love them, but they come in plastic cups,and I find it wasteful to just throw them in the trash. Can I recycle them in my regular “mixed” commingled recycling? Its the number 5 “PP” plastic. Thanks

The Expert answers:

Reduce>Reuse>Recycle

Reduce: Some store managers will allow you to bring in your own beverage container of the appropriate size. In fact, they have in the past given out refillable commemorative cups.

Reuse: I use the large cups to start tomato and other plants. Poke out a few holes along the bottom of the cup and you have a planter. Set the cup in a tuna can or yogurt container to catch the water that drains from the cup. The clear domed lids on fraps make cups into excellent little green houses.

Recycle: After you plan, rinse the plastic off in a bucket of water destine to be used for the garden. Sort the clean plastic and metal cans to the appropriate recycle bin.

Maria asks…

Recycling Plastic Bags?

Anybody know why they can recycle plastic bottles and yet they can’t recycle plastic bags? I think every household got more plastic bags than plastic bottles. All the stores I’ve been to always give me more than enough plastic bags to carry the stuff I buy, and I don’t even buy a lot of stuff. I kind of save the plastic bags, and now they are like a big pile. I thought if I threw them away like everyone else, would that be bad for the environment? I saw a documentary about plastic bags are very difficult to decompose in the ground, in fact, even after one thousand years, they still look the same. So why would they just recycle plastic bags like they recycle plastic bottles? After all, they are all plastics.

The Expert answers:

Plastic bags will last for hundreds of years if they are buried in landfills in fairly anaerobic conditions. If left out in full sun, they’ll actually break down in a matter of weeks.

However, what they break down into isn’t necessarily an improvement. At least in anaerobic conditions, we know exactly where the bags are. Sigh.

The best solution is not to use plastic bags at all, of course. Next best solution is to find a way to re-use them, either as-is (for example, shredded finely and used as fluffy insulation in clothing & bedding), or re-worked into something else (ex: heated & blended, and made into flexible roadside reflector-posts on fast roads — they do that in Australia).

I saw a short documentary on this a while ago. The cleverest idea, I thought, was developed by a guy who saw that different types of plastics can be re-worked to make materials with specific characteristics, but that most haven’t got enough desirable characteristics to be re-made into anything that’s actually useful.

So he worked with two second-use plastics: one had flexibility, but stretched out too much — that is, it would bend or twist, but it would get thinner and weaker all the while. The other plastic had virtually no flexibility, in fact it was as stiff and immovable as stone — it was also very strong overall, but broke easily under localized stress (stress on one or two points). Unfortunately, there was no way to blend these two plastics to come up with a product that had the best features of both materials.

Eventually, though, this guy worked out a system of *physically* blending the plastics, instead of chemically. He came up with a way of making interlocking units of the two plastics that, once they were all locked in place, couldn’t be pulled apart — and the resulting composite had the best of both worlds. The system works so well that he’s demonstrated structural components for buildings made with it, and even bridge girders that will handle tank traffic.

It’s just too bad that we’ve recognized the need to keep waste plastics from cluttering up the world *before* we developed useful things to actually use these plastics *for.* Better late than never, I suppose.

I suppose the “good” news (?!) is that we still have *hundreds of years* in which to continue exercising our ingenuity. 😀

Laura asks…

How do you recycle your plastic shopping bags?

Personally I use paper, but from my previous poll many opted for plastic.
some countries use cloth bags for groceries…made out of jute

The Expert answers:

Many supermarkets have recycle bins where you can put the used plastic grocery bags. A little known fact: you can also put the plastic rings from six-packs in these recycle bins! Most places that recycle the plastic bags will reuse the six-pack rings as well!

Lizzie asks…

What to do with NON_RECYCLE plastic bags?

I Have different variety of plastic bags which dose not have recycle symbol on it. I don’t want to through in the normal trash and end it in land fill. if some company can use the plastic I can send it to there. They are not in condition to be reused though they are clean.

The Expert answers:

Call your local recycling program or municipality and ask about these bags. Most plastic bags are recyclable although they may not have the recycling symbol.
Also, don’t forget that rather than recycling, you can reduce and reuse. This is the most important thing in the concept of recycling. I know you said that they are not in the condition to be reused (as bags?) but maybe try this link. It has 61 uses for plastic bags. 🙂
http://www.truckerphoto.com/wallyworldbag.htm

Think green ? Purple!!!

George asks…

3 forms to recycle or reused plastic?

Can someone tell 3 different forms to recycle or reused the plastic,
but I need them short

The Expert answers:

The common process that is used in recycling plastic is the inverse polymerization process where the polymers in the plastic are converted into initial monomers that were used in the manufacture. These chemicals are then purified and synthesized to form new plastic materials. Assorted polymers are converted into petroleum in another recycling process. The advantage of this process is that any mix of polymers can be used. A new recycling process generates heat from the friction of plastic materials which melts the plastics. This is then pumped into casting moulds. The great advantage of this technique is that all types of plastics can be recycled.

Robert asks…

Does your council recycle plastics?

If “yes”, which council and what sorts of plastic?
Does it go with the normal recycle bin collection?

The Expert answers:

London Borough of Bromley gives us a bin with two sections, one side for plastic drinks and detergent bottles and the other side for tins and glass jars. When the dustmen empty these recycling bins, they tip the whole lot back in together.

Bromley was given a very large government award last year for good waste recycling percentage results (30%) which they ploughed back into the site and they’re testing sorting machines with a view to buying one for £100K.

They send us news letters telling us where all the recycled waste is sent for processing. Our plastics are sent to a local plant and used for household products.

If we fail to recycle in this way, they will charge us for our collections. They collect once a fortnight on the same day as the general waste which is taken weekly but there’s now less of that of course.

I get the impression they’re working towards a fortnightly collection in the future.

David asks…

How do you recycle plastic or paper?

HOW DO YOU RECYCLE ???????Plastic and paper?

The Expert answers:

When you take paper, plastics, metals, glass, and other recyclables, you place them into recycle bins. These bins are then emptied into collection bins, like those that you or your building places into a street or alley. A recycling truck, almost identical to a garbage truck will collect these recyclables and ship them to a recycling facility.

There, depending on how your area recycles, the recyclables are dumped out and sorted, sometimes by hand, usually by machine. A huge magnet picks up any metals, where they are sorted again. They are melted and remolded to make new cans, or other metal products. Paper is sifted out after going through a wall of many vertical ‘discs’, and is blended into pulp, and remolded once again into paper or cardboard. Newspaper, cardboard, and plastics are also recycled the same. Glass bottles are smashed and ground into sand, and reheated and remolded again into new bottles.

Depending on the facility near you, the recycling plant may do this here, or in a foreign nation like China. The recycled materials, may be sold to a company, like Coca-Cola.

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