Cleaning contaminated plastic film with water only transfers the contamination
from the film to the water. Water treatment is an added expense. But when
you clean dry, you remove the problem, says Heinz Schnettler, engineer
at the Systec div. of Duales System Deutschland, which administers the Green
Dot program for recycling packaging waste in Germany. He also notes that
if you remove paper labels while dry, you preserve their value for waste-to-energy
incineration. If paper gets wet, it gains weight and costs more to dispose of.
Systec cleans film and flake with a Waterless Mechanical Purifier, which comes
in two sizes, both with throughput capacity of 2000 to 4500 lb/hr of plastic,
but one provides more cleaning time. The MR 75 is 3 meters long, has a 100-hp
drive, and tackles plastic with average contamination. The MR 110 is twice as
long, has a 150-hp drive, and tackles difficult problems like removing paper
labels. A complete system with the larger MR 110 unit costs about $133,000.
With the MR 75, its $20,000 less.
Systec has 26 dry recycling units installed worldwide that are reclaiming film,
post-consumer mixed plastics, and plastic/paper composites. One system in Canada
removes paper labels from PET flake. Systec recently gave a license to shredder
maker Kurimoto Ltd. in Osaka, Japan, which has sold two Systec systems so far.
Cleaning with air
The Systec process starts with a buffer silo that holds 4 to 8 m3 of shredded
film. Feed augers inside the silo are configured for specific film weights from
10-micron stretch film to heavy industrial film.
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The heart of Systecs dry recycling system is the mechanical purifier,
which uses centrifugal force to separate plastic flake from paper labels in
2 to 3 seconds.
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From the silo, flake goes onto a shaker to break up the clumps that could clog
downstream devices. The flake then travels up an angled auger. At each stage,
the material moves a little faster to fluff it up before it undergoes air separation.
The first separation step occurs in a free-fall chamber, which removes rocks
and bottles that could damage the purifier.
The purifier is essentially a dry centrifuge that uses very high-speed air flow
and runs continuously, not in batches. Its a horizontal, cylindrical chamber
with a central rotor armed with paddles turning at high speed inside a polygonal
screen basket. The patent (U.S. No. 6527206, issued this March) says the rotor
creates centrifugal force that flings plastic flakes with attached paper labels
against the screen basket. Specially shaped rotor blades apply high friction,
removing the paper from the plastic and tearing the paper into very small particles,
which pass through the holes in the screen basket and are sucked out one end
of the chamber by a fan. Plastic flakes, which remain inside the screen basket,
are driven by the paddles to the opposite end of the chamber and sucked out.
Each flake spends only 2 to 3 sec in the chamber.
Systecs system reportedly can run continuously 24/7. You have one
inspection per week for oil in the bearings, Schnettler notes, but
you have nothing to do inside.