Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Removing microplastics with engineered bacteria

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Researchers altered bacteria found in wastewater treatment, where microplastics can enter environment

Microplastics can go right through wastewater treatment plants, and researchers have engineered bacteria commonly found in there to break down this pollution before it can persist in the environment.



Researchers from the University of Waterloo added DNA to several species of bacteria found in wastewater, allowing them to biodegrade polyethylene terephthalate (PET), a common plastic found in carpet, clothing and containers for food and beverages.


PET plastics take hundreds of years to degrade in the environment. Over time, they break down into microplastics, pieces of plastic less than 5 mm long, which enter the food chain. Chemicals in these plastics are associated with insulin resistance, cancer and decreased reproductive health.


“Think of these bacteria that already exist in water systems to clean up microplastics as biorobots that can be programmed to get the job done,” said Dr. Marc Aucoin, a professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering. “Microplastics in water also enhance the spread of antibiotic resistance, so this breakthrough could also address that concern."

The researchers use a natural process referred to as “bacterial sex,” where bacteria share genetic material with each other when multiplying. It enables the introduction of a new trait into the target bacteria, giving them the ability to break down microplastics.


“As next steps, we will use modelling to understand how well the bacteria transfer the new genetic information under different environmental conditions and thus how effectively they can break down the plastics,” said Dr. Brian Ingalls, a professor in the Department of Applied Mathematics. “The long-term vision is to break down microplastics in wastewater treatment plants at scale.”

While the researchers will start with wastewater facilities, they also hope to find ways to clean up the plastic waste accumulating in oceans.


"We will assess the risks of using engineered, plastic-eating bacteria in the natural environment" said Aaron Yip, a PhD candidate in the Department of Chemical Engineering. "Right now, microplastic degradation in wastewater treatment plants is a safer application to target. Many of these facilities are already designed to neutralize bacteria in wastewater, which would kill any engineered bacteria prior to discharging water back into the environment.”


The study, “Degradation of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastics by wastewater bacteria engineered via conjugation," appears in Microbial Biotechnology.


source: University of Waterloo


https://youtu.be/ZTdKqa19cpY

Monday, January 13, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share :New study finds ocean plastic could be recycled in urban waste systems

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

In response to the millions of tons of marine litter, mostly plastics, floating on the oceans, the need to manage this waste effectively is more urgent than ever. Faced with this reality, the UPV/EHU’s Materials + Technologies research group decided to take the first step.

Classifying Marine Waste as Urban Waste:

We assessed a practical approach: the possibility of integrating plastics collected from the sea into the urban waste system. This study, which is part of a PhD thesis, explores the possibility of managing this waste efficiently in current urban recycling infrastructures,explained Cristina Peña, lecturer in the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering at the Faculty of Engineering, Gipuzkoa (UPV/EHU) and author of the work.


Unlike municipal solid waste, marine litter does not yet have a systematized management system; it is managed on a very ad hoc basis and within the framework of very specific projects. “It is important to bear in mind that this waste, having been at sea, has a level of degradation that is significantly different from, for example,a bottle deposited in a yellow container under normal conditions.So, our starting point and key question was precisely this:


Automatic Separation of Marine Plastics Such as PP and PE:

In this work, we used identical PET plastic water bottles of the same brand to assess the effects of various environmental conditions. We divided the bottles into two batches: the first batch was left in the open air for nine months, simulating exposure on a beach or rocky coast, and the second batch was submerged in the sea for the same period. We saw that the submerged bottles underwent increased chemical degradation, while those exposed to the open air on the “shore” remained in a better state.This approach allowed them to analyze how the degradation process varies according to marine conditions and how each type of waste responds in different environments.


Then they “simulated how these materials would be managed in an urban solid waste treatment plant” by comparing them with the same bottles that had not undergone degradation to see if the automatic separation equipment in these plants would be able to identify and separate the plastic bottles of marine origin.


“To find out, we conducted tests using an optical separation system, a type of technology that automatically classifies materials according to their composition, and saw that the effectiveness of separating the bottles of marine origin, both those exposed to the open air and those submerged in the sea- was very high, comparable to that of bottles from urban waste.


Source: University of the Basque Country/www.polymer-additives.specialchem.com


Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : EU – Regulations on the use of BPA in food contact materials and products

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

EU Bans Bisphenol A in Food Contact Materials

The European Commission published Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/3190 on 31 December 2025, addressing the use of bisphenol A (BPA) in food contact materials and products.


Scope of the Regulations:

Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/3190 applies to materials and articles that come into contact with food. These include varnishes, coatings, plastics, and other items where bisphenols and their derivatives may be present. The regulation specifically targets substances classified as hazardous under harmonized EU standards, particularly bisphenol A (BPA), due to its endocrine-disrupting properties and potential health risks. The regulation builds on and amends the earlier Regulation (EU) No 10/2011 and repeals Regulation (EU) 2018/213 to provide a more comprehensive and updated framework.


Requirements

The regulation prohibits the use of BPA and its salts in the production and marketing of food contact materials and articles. This ban encompasses the following materials:

Adhesives

Rubbers

Ion-exchange resins

Plastics

Printing inks

Silicones

Varnishes and coatings


However, BPA and its salts can be used in the production of food contact materials under specific conditions outlined in Annex II, which apply to plastics, varnishes, and coatings. These restrictions include:

Migration of BPA into food must be undetectable.

Final food contact articles must be cleaned and flushed before their first use in contact with food.

Additionally, the manufacture of food contact materials and articles using other hazardous bisphenols is prohibited unless they meet the same restrictions.


Business operators are required to prepare a Declaration of Compliance (DoC) containing:

*The identity, address, and contact details of the operator issuing the declaration.

*The identity, address, and contact details of the manufacturer or importer.

*Identification of the food contact material or article, including intermediate and final products.

*The date of the declaration.

*A list of bisphenols or their derivatives used in manufacturing the product.

*A statement confirming compliance with this Regulation and EU Food Contact Materials and Articles Regulation.


Under the Plastic Food Contact Materials and Articles Regulation (EU) No 10/2011, the substances 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propane (entry 151) and 4,4’-dihydroxydiphenyl sulphone (entry 154) have been removed from Table 1 in Annex I.


Transitional Period:

Single-use food contact articles containing BPA that do not comply with this Regulation may remain on the market until July 20, 2026.

Repeat-use final food contact articles manufactured using BPA that do not comply with this Regulation may be first placed on the market until 20 July 2026. The products may remain on the market until 20 January 2029.


source:European Commission /www.intertek.com

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Friction and Wear problems in Polymers

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

While in metals, wear is found to be strongly correlated with surface hardness (something not difficult to believe honestly), things are way more complex when it comes to plastics.

As shown in the attached classical graph, wear kinetics in polymers seems to correlate very well with the reciprocal of Stress@break X Strain@break.


Something known as the Ratner-Lancaster correlation.

So, for best performance, you want a strong polymer (which also means a very stiff one due to another typical correlation) with the highest elongation@break.

And guess what ? Elongation@break invariably decreases when elastic modulus goes up !

So this points to the fact that it is intrinsically very difficult to optimize the wear performance of polymers or find that elusive rare performer.

The result is that solutions are typically based on complex formulations using multiple fillers, some to increase strength, some to create a "slippery" transfer film mitigating the role of the typically lowish elongation at break.

source:Vito leo

Friday, January 10, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : Alabama lab cooks up powerful solution for plastic scrap:

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

The University of Alabama has scored a breakthrough that could be a recycling game-changer for multiple types of plastics.

‘Plastic recycling is commonplace but imperfect,’ says Dr. Jason Bara, who leads a PET depolymerisation R&D project at the university. He had been working with amines for a couple of years to break down plastics as part of a National Science Foundation grant in an attempt to reduce plastic waste. Recently, he tried a new approach ‘just to see what would happen’.


‘The plastic is gone’

A key to his discovery is imidazole and its related compounds; a group of organic molecules that have proven to be highly effective in the chemolysis process.


Previously, plastic depolymerisation had been achieved using water, alcohols, and amines. Bara notes that nothing in the literature pointed to the power of imidazoles as a recycling agent.

‘I’ve been working with imidazole for much of my career. It’s pretty amazing how versatile it is,’ he says. One day, one of his students came into the lab and told him the plastic they had been doing tests on was simply gone.


Patent pending

The University of Alabama has filed a patent application for the innovative PET recycling process. Bara says it offers several key advantages over other chemical recycling methods, including the lack of additional solvents or catalyst. This is due to the relatively low melting point of imidazole.

Bara underlines this is a great quality for developing a cost efficient and commercially viable process. He adds that the new method is unique in that it’s a flexible recycling technology. ‘You can get a wider range of final products from PET depolymerisation when you do it our way,’ he explains.

Beyond PET

Bara is excited about the new opportunities his research may unlock. For example, recent tests have demonstrated that imidazolysis is also useful in depolymerising polyurethanes. These are more difficult to process than PET.

What’s challenging is that polyurethanes are generally made into foam products that are full of air, do not melt and contain a large number of inorganic additives.


‘Our process could increase the recycling of polyurethane foam, which is widely used a variety of consumer products – ranging from packing foams, seat cushions, memory foam mattresses to automobile seats,’ Bara says.

‘While I think what we’ve already published on the successful imidazolysis of PET is very exciting, the chemical recycling of polyurethanes is where imidazolysis may potentially have a much bigger impact.’


source:University of Alabama / www.recyclinginternational.com

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share:Carbon Fiber running Blade

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Carbon fiber composite is a lightweight material commonly used in a running blade. The blade is often embedded directly into the socket or fixed below the socket within lower-limb prostheses.


Athletes with unilateral transtibial amputations are prescribed C- or J-shaped running blades with a manufacturer-recommended stiffness category based on body mass and activity level, and height based on unaffected leg and residual limb length.


C-shaped running blades attach distal to the socket and are recommended for distance running (e.g. 10 km, half marathon, and marathon) and J-shaped running blades attach posterior to the socket and are recommended for sprinting (e.g. 100 m, 200 m, and 400 m).


C- shaped running blade is more effective at storing and releasing energy over time which helps you to run more efficiently and for longer periods of time.


J - shaped running blade allows for a quick return of energy helping you to achieve higher speeds.


Running blade height is set based on the athlete’s contralateral unaffected leg length, stride kinematics, and their prosthetist’s and personal preference.


The height of a C-shaped running blade is adjusted by shortening or lengthening the pylon that connects the running blade to the socket, while the height of a J-shaped running blade is adjusted by changing its mounting position posterior to the socket.


Composites are gaining popularity in modern-day orthopaedics and are used in orthotic and prosthetic manufacturing. According to Stratview Research, the market for orthopaedic composites will reach USD 286 million in 2024.


source:composights

#composites


Wednesday, January 8, 2025

New filter captures and recycles aluminum from manufacturing waste

MIT engineers designed a nanofiltration process that could make aluminum production more efficient while reducing hazardous waste.

Used in everything from soda cans and foil wrap to circuit boards and rocket boosters, aluminum is the second-most-produced metal in the world after steel. By the end of this decade, demand is projected to drive up aluminum production by 40 percent worldwide. This steep rise will magnify aluminum’s environmental impacts, including any pollutants that are released with its manufacturing waste.

MIT engineers have developed a new nanofiltration process to curb the hazardous waste generated from aluminum production. Nanofiltration could potentially be used to process the waste from an aluminum plant and retrieve any aluminum ions that would otherwise have escaped in the effluent stream. The captured aluminum could then be upcycled and added to the bulk of the produced aluminum, increasing yield while simultaneously reducing waste.

The researchers demonstrated the membrane’s performance in lab-scale experiments using a novel membrane to filter various solutions that were similar in content to the waste streams produced by aluminum plants. They found that the membrane selectively captured more than 99 percent of aluminum ions in these solutions.

If scaled up and implemented in existing production facilities, the membrane technology could reduce the amount of wasted aluminum and improve the environmental quality of the waste that plants generate.

“This membrane technology not only cuts down on hazardous waste but also enables a circular economy for aluminum by reducing the need for new mining,” says John Lienhard, the Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Water in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab (J-WAFS) at MIT. “This offers a promising solution to address environmental concerns while meeting the growing demand for aluminum.”

Lienhard and his colleagues report their results in a study appearing today in the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering. The study’s co-authors include MIT mechanical engineering undergraduates Trent Lee and Vinn Nguyen, and Zi Hao Foo SM ’21, PhD ’24, who is a postdoc at the University of California at Berkeley.

A recycling niche

Lienhard’s group at MIT develops membrane and filtration technologies for desalinating seawater and remediating various sources of wastewater. In looking for new areas to apply their work, the team found an unexplored opportunity in aluminum and, in particular, the wastewater generated from the metal’s production.

As part of aluminum’s production, metal-rich ore, called bauxite, is first mined from open pits, then put through a series of chemical reactions to separate the aluminum from the rest of the mined rock. These reactions ultimately produce aluminum oxide, in a powdery form called alumina. Much of this alumina is then shipped to refineries, where the powder is poured into electrolysis vats containing a molten mineral called cryolite. When a strong electric current is applied, cryolite breaks alumina’s chemical bonds, separating aluminum and oxygen atoms. The pure aluminum then settles in liquid form to the bottom of the vat, where it can be collected and cast into various forms.

Cryolite electrolyte acts as a solvent, facilitating the separation of alumina during the molten salt electrolysis process. Over time, the cryolite accumulates impurities such as sodium, lithium, and potassium ions — gradually reducing its effectiveness in dissolving alumina. At a certain point, the concentration of these impurities reaches a critical level, at which the electrolyte must be replaced with fresh cryolite to main process efficiency. The spent cryolite, a viscous sludge containing residual aluminum ions and impurities, is then transported away for disposal.   

“We learned that for a traditional aluminum plant, something like 2,800 tons of aluminum are wasted per year,” says lead author Trent Lee. “We were looking at ways that the industry can be more efficient, and we found cryolite waste hadn’t been well-researched in terms of recycling some of its waste products.”

A charged kick

In their new work, the researchers aimed to develop a membrane process to filter cryolite waste and recover aluminum ions that inevitably make it into the waste stream. Specifically, the team looked to capture aluminum while letting through all other ions, especially sodium, which builds up significantly in the cryolite over time.

The team reasoned that if they could selectively capture aluminum from cryolite waste, the aluminum could be poured back into the electrolysis vat without adding excessive sodium that would further slow the electrolysis process.

The researchers’ new design is an adaptation of membranes used in conventional water treatment plants. These membranes are typically made from a thin sheet of polymer material that is perforated by tiny, nanometer-scale pores, the size of which is tuned to let through specific ions and molecules.

The surface of conventional membranes carries a natural, negative charge. As a result, the membranes repel any ions that carry the same negative charge, while they attract positively charged ions to flow through.

In collaboration with the Japanese membrane company Nitto Denko, the MIT team sought to examine the efficacy of commercially available membranes that could filter through most positively charged ions in cryolite wastewater while repelling and capturing aluminum ions. However, aluminum ions also carry a positive charge, of +3, where sodium and the other cations carry a lesser positive charge of +1.

Motivated by the group’s recent work investigating membranes for recovering lithium from salt lakes and spent batteries, the team tested a novel Nitto Denko membrane with a thin, positively charged coating covering the membrane. The coating’s charge is just positive enough to strongly repel and retain aluminum while allowing less positively charged ions to flow through.

“The aluminum is the most positively charged of the ions, so most of it is kicked away from the membrane,” Foo explains.

The team tested the membrane’s performance by passing through solutions with various balances of ions, similar to what can be found in cryolite waste. They observed that the membrane consistently captured 99.5 percent of aluminum ions while allowing through sodium and the other cations. They also varied the pH of the solutions, and found the membrane maintained its performance even after sitting in highly acidic solution for several weeks.

“A lot of this cryolite waste stream comes at different levels of acidity,” Foo says. “And we found the membrane works really well, even within the harsh conditions that we would expect.”

The new experimental membrane is about the size of a playing card. To treat cryolite waste in an industrial-scale aluminum production plant, the researchers envision a scaled-up version of the membrane, similar to what is used in many desalination plants, where a long membrane is rolled up in a spiral configuration, through which water flows.

“This paper shows the viability of membranes for innovations in circular economies,” Lee says. “This membrane provides the dual benefit of upcycling aluminum while reducing hazardous waste.”

credits:MIT News

Faerch advances circular packaging leadership with growing rPET volumes from Cirrec

As many recyclers across Europe face significant market pressures and operational challenges, Faerch’s integrated recycling facility, Cirrec...