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Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling

To enable the use of recyclates in thermoformed polypropylene products with acceptable optical appearance and good mechanical stability, a multilayer structure of virgin and recycled material can be used. When producing multilayer films with more than two layers, the used materials should have simil...

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Autores principales: Traxler, Ines, Marschik, Christian, Farthofer, Manuel, Laske, Stephan, Fischer, Joerg
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9269344/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35808743
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14132699
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author Traxler, Ines
Marschik, Christian
Farthofer, Manuel
Laske, Stephan
Fischer, Joerg
author_facet Traxler, Ines
Marschik, Christian
Farthofer, Manuel
Laske, Stephan
Fischer, Joerg
author_sort Traxler, Ines
collection PubMed
description To enable the use of recyclates in thermoformed polypropylene products with acceptable optical appearance and good mechanical stability, a multilayer structure of virgin and recycled material can be used. When producing multilayer films with more than two layers, the used materials should have similar melt flow properties to prevent processing instabilities. In the case of a three-layer film, post-consumer recyclates are often hidden in the core layer. Due to the inconsistent melt flow properties of post-consumer recyclates, the adjustment of the melt flow properties of the core layer to those of the outer layers has to be realized by blending with virgin materials. In order to understand the effect of mixing with a virgin material with a certain pre-defined melt flow rate (MFR), material mixtures with different mixing partners from various sources were realized in this study. Hence, the pre-defined virgin material was mixed with (i) virgin materials, (ii) artificial recyclates out of a mixture of different virgin materials, and (iii) commercially available recyclates. These blends with mixing partner contents ranging from 0–100% in 10% increments were prepared by compounding and the MFR of each mixture was determined. For a mathematical description of the mixing behavior and furthermore for a proper MFR prediction of the material mix, existing mixing rules were tested on the three pre-defined sample groups. Therefore, this paper shows the applicability of different mixing rules for the prediction of the MFR of material blends. Furthermore, a new mixing rule was developed using symbolic regression based on genetic programming, which proved to be the most accurate predictive model.
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spelling pubmed-92693442022-07-09 Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling Traxler, Ines Marschik, Christian Farthofer, Manuel Laske, Stephan Fischer, Joerg Polymers (Basel) Article To enable the use of recyclates in thermoformed polypropylene products with acceptable optical appearance and good mechanical stability, a multilayer structure of virgin and recycled material can be used. When producing multilayer films with more than two layers, the used materials should have similar melt flow properties to prevent processing instabilities. In the case of a three-layer film, post-consumer recyclates are often hidden in the core layer. Due to the inconsistent melt flow properties of post-consumer recyclates, the adjustment of the melt flow properties of the core layer to those of the outer layers has to be realized by blending with virgin materials. In order to understand the effect of mixing with a virgin material with a certain pre-defined melt flow rate (MFR), material mixtures with different mixing partners from various sources were realized in this study. Hence, the pre-defined virgin material was mixed with (i) virgin materials, (ii) artificial recyclates out of a mixture of different virgin materials, and (iii) commercially available recyclates. These blends with mixing partner contents ranging from 0–100% in 10% increments were prepared by compounding and the MFR of each mixture was determined. For a mathematical description of the mixing behavior and furthermore for a proper MFR prediction of the material mix, existing mixing rules were tested on the three pre-defined sample groups. Therefore, this paper shows the applicability of different mixing rules for the prediction of the MFR of material blends. Furthermore, a new mixing rule was developed using symbolic regression based on genetic programming, which proved to be the most accurate predictive model. MDPI 2022-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9269344/ /pubmed/35808743 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14132699 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Traxler, Ines
Marschik, Christian
Farthofer, Manuel
Laske, Stephan
Fischer, Joerg
Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title_full Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title_fullStr Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title_full_unstemmed Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title_short Application of Mixing Rules for Adjusting the Flowability of Virgin and Post-Consumer Polypropylene as an Approach for Design from Recycling
title_sort application of mixing rules for adjusting the flowability of virgin and post-consumer polypropylene as an approach for design from recycling
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9269344/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35808743
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14132699
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