Title: Recycling Guidelines
1Recycling Guidelines
2Design for Recycling Guidelines
- Most recycling guidelines are divided into three
categories - Component design
- Material selection
- Fastener selection
- Most people agree that these issues, plus the
choice of which processes are employed for
recycling, have the largest impact on
recyclability. - Mechanical and manual separation techniques can
be suggested for each of the above areas. - Some also emphasize packaging.
3Fundamental Lessons Learned
- As part of ongoing efforts in improving vehicle
recyclability, a number of fundamental lessons
have been learned from the disassembly of
vehicles and studies by the Vehicle Recycling
Partnership - The limiting factor in economic recycling of
complex, integrated assemblies (such as
instrument panels) is the separation into pure
material streams. - Both manual and mechanical separation have their
advantages and disadvantages. - Significant value must be retained in a part for
manual separation to be economically feasible. - Different design techniques should be employed
depending on whether one wants to facilitate
manual separation or mechanical separation. - These fundamental lessons should be kept in mind
when generating design alternatives.
4Process Selection Guidelines
5Metric for Selecting Separation Technique
- How do you know which process to design for?
- The following flowchart provides a relatively
simple metric for design decision support.
Material Removal Rate Material kg / time min
From Coulter, S. L., Bras, B. A., Winslow, G.
and Yester, S., 1996, Designing for Material
Separation Lessons from the Automotive
Recycling, 1996 ASME Design for Manufacturing
Symposium, ASME Design Engineering Technical
Conferences and Computers in Engineering
Conference, Irvine, California, August 18-22,
ASME, Paper no. 96-DETC/DFM-1270.
6Detached Weight for Cost Neutral Recyling (g/min)
- The amount of material (in grams) that has to be
detached per minute if recycling is to be cost
neutral for manual disassembly - Precious metals
- gold 0.05
- palladium 0.14
- sliver 5.1
- Metals
- copper 300
- aluminium 700
- iron 50,000
- Plastics
- PEE 250
- PC, PM 350
- ABS 800
- PS 1000
- PVC 4000
- Glass 6000
Based on West-European hourly rates and material
prices in Sept. 1995 (Philips Center for
Manufacturing Technology)
Estimated total industrial labor rate US0.6/min
7End-of-Life Destination Flowchart (from TNO
Industry Delft, The Netherlands)
- General guidelines to determine end-of-life
destinations
8Material Selection Guidelines
9Recycling Two or More Materials(from GE Plastics)
Rule of Thumb You want to take the shortest path
for material recycling
NOTE Ideally, you just want to have ONE material!
10Material Compatibility
- Compatibility matrices (or tables) list whether
two materials are compatible, that is, they can
be processed together. - Most tables are for plastics, but some also exist
for metal alloys. Most use a (rough) scale of 1-4
or 1-3. - Typically, the information regarding
compatibility (and especially detailed
information) is buried in chemical handbooks.
In case of doubt, see your material expert.
Question Are regular and galvanized steel
compatible?
The table shown here is translated from VDI 2243.
11Glass and Ceramics Compatibility
- good, 0 moderate, - poor/nil
The table shown here is from Ecodesign A
Promising Approach to Sustainable Production and
Consumption, UNEP/IE, United Nations.
12Compatibility of Metals
- In general, metal parts are easily recycled, but
the following rules and guidelines apply - Unplated metals are more recyclable than plated
ones. - Low alloy metals are more recyclable than high
alloy ones. - Most cast irons are easily recycled.
- Aluminum alloys, steel, and magnesium alloys are
readily separated and recycled from automotive
shredder output. - Contamination of iron or steel with copper, tin,
zinc, lead, or aluminum reduces recyclability. - Contamination of aluminum with iron, steel,
chromium, zinc, lead, copper or magnesium reduces
recyclability. - Contamination of zinc with iron, steel, lead,
tin, or cadmium reduces recyclability.
The table shown here is from Ecodesign A
Promising Approach to Sustainable Production and
Consumption, UNEP/IE, United Nations.
13A Well Known Laminate Example
- Look around and you will see a lot of room for
improvement.
From Green Products by Design Choices for a
Cleaner Environment, Office of Technology
Assessment, US Congress, Oct. 1992.
14Material Selection
- At the onset of a new program, the Design
Office, Platform Engineering, Purchasing and
Supply, and the component supplier should discuss
recycling issues associated with a concept and
determine the best fit materials and processes
for specific applications. - Suppliers should be encouraged to demonstrate
recyclability and to take materials back for
recycling at the end of the vehicles useful life
to be recycled in automotive and other
applications. - The use of materials which have been recycled,
including from old vehicles, is desirable where
it is economically viable. - (from Chrysler Vehicle Recycling Design
Guidelines)
15Diversity of Plastics
- There is an incredible variety of plastics in
modern vehicles. - However, the top 7 used plastics are (in
N-America) - Urethane 1990 - 454 mill. lbs, 1995 - 493
mill. lbs. - Polypropylene (PP) 1990 - 437 mill. lbs, 1995 -
522 mill. lbs. - Acrylonitrile/Butadiene/Styrene (ABS) 1990 - 281
mill, 1995 - 289 mill. lbs. - Polyvinylchloride (PVC) 1990 - 264 mill. lbs,
1995 - 288 mill. lbs. - Nylon 1990 - 208 mill. lbs, 1995 - 246 mill.
lbs. - Polyethylene (PE) 1990 - 191 mill. lbs, 1995 -
248 mill. lbs. - Polyester composite (SMC) 1990 - 173 mill. lbs,
1995 - 261 mill. lbs. - Thus, if you have to choose a plastic, try
picking one which is widely used. - Minimizing material diversity is beneficial for
acquisition, storage, manufacturing, recycling,
etc.
16Main Material Concerns
- Meet environment, health, and occupational safety
requirements for regulated or restricted
substances or processes of concern. - Do not, or limit, the use of materials which pose
human or environmental risk. - Mark materials according to standards.
- Generate minimal home and pre-consumer scrap
during manufacturing. - Make components of different recyclable materials
easily separable, or use materials which can be
recycled as a mixture. - Standardize material types.
- Reduce painting.
17Cathode Ray Tubes - Problem
- Cathode ray tubes (CRTs) pose a major difficulty
for recycling. - The phosphor-based coating used to provide the
necessary luminescence contains heavy metals and
other toxins, while the glass itself is loaded
with lead and barium. - Recycling a specific design of CRT with known
constituents is relatively straightforward, but
finding a process that will handle very large
quantities of CRTs of varying age and
specification is not so easy.
18Marking of Plastics
- SAE J1344 April 1993 contains the standards on
marking of plastic parts. - Based on standard symbols as published by ISO
1043. - Allows for expansion and inclusion of new symbols
for new material. (complete appropriate forms). - See SAE J1344 for examples and specifics.
- European legislation will require the marking of
all plastic parts with a weight greater than 100
grams.
19Positions and Life of Markings
- No position of marking is prescribed, but
- Field service people should be informed regarding
the material. - If practicable, marking should be located where
it may be observed while it is in use. May
consider multiple markings. - Marking on the outside is preferred for field
service people. - Also, markings should last
- Markings applied with inks, dyes, paints should
not bleed, run, smudge, or stain materials in
contact with the marking. - Markings should be designed to remain legible
during the entire life of the part. - Markings which are molded into the part are
preferred since they are permanent and do not
require additional manufacturing operations.
BUT, molded parts should not create a stress
concentration.
20Material Selection Summarizing
- General
- Avoid regulated and/or restricted materials
- These often MUST be recycled, whatever the
monetary cost of removal is. - Use recyclable materials
- Both technically as well as economically
- Use recycled materials, where possible
- This increases recycled content
- Standardize material types
- May involve corporate decision
- Reduce number of material types
- Can be done at engineering level
- Use compatible materials, if different materials
are needed. - Single material is preferred, however.
- Eliminate incompatible laminated/non-separable
materials. - These are a major hassle.
21Material Selection (cont.)
- Manual Separation
- Avoid painting parts with incompatible paint
- Especially plastics can be contaminated by paint.
- Eliminate incompatible laminated/non-separable
materials - Mechanical Separation
- Reduce number of materials as much as possible
- Probably two materials can be economically
recovered - Choose materials with different properties (e.g.,
magnetic vs non-magnetic heavy vs light), thus
enabling easy separation. - Allow for density separation
- Maintain at least 0.03 specific gravity
difference between polymers - Isolate polymers with largest mass by density
- Eliminate incompatible laminated/non-separable
materials
22Component Design Guidelines
23Component Design
- Apply Design for Manufacturing and Assembly
(DFMA) and Serviceability Guidelines as
appropriate in component design. - Facilitate ease of assembly removal and material
separation. - (There is a close correspondence between DFA,
DFD, and Design for Service) - Route wiring to facilitate removal.
Pay attention to detail and reduce the amount of
frustration and special equipment. Label
dangerous operations.
24Minimize Part and Material Count
- To facilitate separation and collection
- Minimize the number of components within an
assembly. - Minimize material types within an assembly.
- Build in planes of easy separation where this
does not affect part function. - Look under a hood for good and bad examples.
- (By the way, think also about modularity)
- Question What other (non-DFR) reasons exist for
minimizing part and material count?
25Classical Component Integration Example
- Springs and their support systems are always
classical examples of component integration. - Note the reduction in part and material count.
26Laminates and Paints
- Avoid laminates which require separation prior to
reuse. - Even though unique separation techniques exists,
it increases the cost of the recyclable material. - When laminates are used, design them from
compatible materials and adhesives. - Examples
- Dashboard cover
- Old design PVC top foil, PUR foam core, steel
support plate - New design PP top foil, PP foam core, support
layer of PP - Bumper
- Old design PC skin, PUR foam core, steel
support - New design Integral foam of PC, PP, support
frame of PC, PP - Avoid painting parts wherever possible.
27Problems with Paints
- In general, paints contaminate plastics to be
recycled. - Compatible paints exists, but the majority is
non-compatible. - One percent (!) of contamination can be enough to
ruin a plastic batch for recycling. - Many painting processes are subject to
regulations. - For example, in case a city-wide smog alarm goes
off, certain painting processes (or other
processes with volatile compounds) need to be
stopped. - Stripping paint is also a very nasty process.
- Environmentally benign stripping processes
exists, but the paint chips still have to be
disposed off.
28Component Design - Summarizing
- General
- Integrate parts
- Reduce disassembly time
- Minimize scrap during production
- Mechanical separation
- Avoid using incompatible materials
- E.g., stiffen sections rather than adding foam
for noise-vibration-heat areas - Manual
- Use Design for Manufacturability/Assembly and
Serviceability guidelines - Reduce number of steps to remove a recyclable
part - Reduce chance of contamination
- Route wiring to facilitate removal
- Separate at bulkheads/interface areas
29FastenersGuidelines
30What about fasteners ?
- In VDI 2243, an example is given on the
remanufacture of a four cylinder internal
combustion engine. - About 32.5 of all activities in the disassembly
process consist of the loosening of screws.
These activities consume 54 of the entire
disassembly process time. - According to VDI 2243, this is a typical example.
- The separation of staple, glue, press joints or
joints made by deformation not only require more
specialized equipment, but also embody a higher
risk of damaging the component, if it is to be
reused. - Additional problems occur when contaminations
such as oil, dirt and corrosion are present.
31Assembly and Disassembly
- Adhere to Design for Assembly guidelines
- Good designs take ease of assembly as well as
service and recycling into account. - Facilitate disassembly (Design for Disassembly)
- Select fasteners which facilitate disassembly by
any method including destruction (by shredding)
after a vehicles useful life.
32Reduce and Commonize Fasteners
- Reduce the number and types of fasteners used.
- Select fasteners that do not require
post-dismantling material separation for
recycling. - When practical, use fasteners of the same (or
compatible) material as the attaching part. - If this is not possible for plastic fasteners,
use ferrous fasteners or inserts to allow for
magnetic separation after shredding. - Commonize fasteners
- Try to design with minimum screw head types and
sizes. (remember the Volkswagen Bugs 13 mm
wrench standardization) - DO NOT JEOPARDIZE STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY OR
FUNCTION !!
33Select Proper Coatings
- Corroded fasteners cause severe problems for fast
removal of parts - Select coatings which minimize corrosion.
- This may drive up the cost.
- Phospate oil coatings have low corrosion
resistance - Better (but more costly) coatings may be
warranted for recyclability (and servicability). - Cadmium coatings should not be used because of
potential health and environmental hazard.
34Snap fits
- Use snap fits wherever possible to reduce the use
of additional fasteners. - Molded clips should be removable without breaking
off. - IMPORTANT
- Do not jeopardize product integrity.
- Also, consider long term effects (hardening of
plastic, fatigue failure, frustration of broken
snaps).
35Adhesives
- Joining or bonding materials of the same type
with compatible adhesives enhances recycling. - But, non-compatible adhesives may cause
contaminants to enter the material waste stream. - Therefore, adhesive selection and the effect on
part recyclability should be discussed with
Materials Engineering as part of the development
process at the onset of a program.
36VDI 2243s Fastener Selection Table
- This table gives an overview of a German rating
of fasteners. - It will give you an idea of how different
fasteners compare against each other. - Caution By no means is this a definite table!
37Fastener Selection Summarizing
- Clear distinction between manual vs mechanical
separation guidelines - Manual Separation
- Reduce number of fasteners
- Commonize fastener types
- Use fasteners made of compatible materials
- Consider snap-fits (two-way, if necessary)
- Consider destructive fastener removal
- Possible inclusion of break points in material
38Fastener Selection Mechanical Separation
- IMPORTANT Fasteners will not be unfastened!
- Disassembly time is irrelevant!
- Material properties are (again) key issue
- In order of preference, use
- 1) Molded-in fasteners (same material)
- 2) Separate fasteners of same or compatible
material - 3) Ferrous metal fasteners (easy to remove due to
magnetic properties) - 4) Non-ferrous metal fasteners (can be removed
using, e.g., Eddy-current)
39Trade-offs
- Design for Recycling can negatively affect
performance and cost issues. - For example, required material substitution is
not always possible or will cost more. - However, in most cases, the trade-offs can be
resolved and often converted in win-win
situations. - Often cited and studied and questioned are the
trade-offs between design for disassembly and
design for assembly. - Take a look at the DFA guidelines and compare
them not just with DFD, but also with DFR in
general. - Remember, a shredder does not care much about
geometry and fasteners
40Product Design for Assembly Guidelines
- Product Design for Assembly
- 1) Overall Component count should be minimized.
- 2) Minimum use of fasteners.
- 3) Design the product with a base for locating
other components. - 4) Do not require the base to be repositioned
during assembly. - 5) Design components to mate through
straight-line assembly, all from the same
direction. - 6) Maximize component accessibility.
- 7) Make the assembly sequence efficient.
- - Assembly with the fewest steps.
- - Avoids risks of damaging components.
- - Avoids awkward and unstable component,
equipment, and personnel positions. - - Avoid creating many disconnected subassemblies
to be joined later.
41Component Design for Assembly Guidelines
- Component Design for Assembly
- 8) Avoid component characteristics that
complicate retrieval - (Tangling, nesting, and flexibility)
- 9) Design components for a specific type of
retrieval, handling, and insertion. - 10) Design components for end-to-end symmetry
when possible. - 11) Design components for symmetry about their
axes of insertion. - 12) Design components that are not symmetric
about their axes of insertion to be clearly
asymmetric. - 13) Make use of chamfers, leads, and compliance
to facilitate insertion.
42DFR Special Issues
43Limiting Factors
- Identify the limiting factors and address these
first! - Look at a combination of the following component
aspects - Weight If recyclability and recycled content
are defined by weight, it makes sense to look at
the heaviest components first. Improving a 10
pound components recyclability rating from 4 to
3 has a larger impact on the overall system
recyclability than improving a 1 pound component.
- Distance from target ratings Components with
recyclability ratings of 4 and lower should be
improved. Pay special attention to components
with a recyclability rating of 4 because they can
often relatively easily be changed to obtain a
(good) rating of 3. The same applies for
material separation ratings, i.e., first focus on
those components with a separability rating of 4.
- Risk Those components with a high risk are also
prime candidates for improvement. - Violation of Design for Recycling guidelines A
component which clearly violates some of the
Design for Recycling guidelines may also be a
limiting factor and a prime candidate for
improvement. Pay special attention to WHY one or
more guidelines have been violated it may have
been done intentionally to, say, increase
functionality or manufacturability. - Often, upon careful inspection, the material or
combination of materials is the limiting factor
in most parts.
44Risk Assessments
- Some basic simple risk assessments with respect
to achieving targets can be done
45Management Issue Recyclability Target Setting
- Goal of designer Improve vehicle recyclability
- 85 (by weight) required recyclability in 15
years - Current recyclability (first revision) 75
- Four (yearly) revisions of vehicle expected
- Data available on
- expected production for each year
- estimated reliability of vehicles
- Aim Aid designer in setting appropriate targets
for the recyclability of each revision of the
vehicle
46Target Setting Parameters
- Production Uncertainty Normal, ?? 5,000
- Recyclability Triangular, 3
- Reliability, Weibull distribution
- Monte Carlo simulation used to explore effects of
a given set of targets
47Target Setting Constant Improvement
48Target Setting Achieving 85 Recyclability
49Inclusion of Uncertainty
- How will changes in technology and legislation
affect the target definition and prioritization
of limiting factors?
50Computer-Based Tools
51Computer-Aided Design for the Life Cycle System
Architecture
52Automotive Center Console
- Given are the geometric (solid) and assembly
models of a center console design generated using
a modern CAD package.
Assembly Model
Solid Model
53Virtual Disassembly
- Disassembly in a Virtual Reality environment
facilitates design for recycling as well as
design for serviceability. - Other assessments are also being added (e.g.,
demanufacture process cost assessments) - The key is to use the existing product models and
add functionality in existing and (for a
designer) familiar software systems.
- NSF grants
- Virtual Design Studio for Servicing and
Demanufacture (Rosen, Bras, Mistree, Goel,
Baker) DMI9420405 - CAD for De- and Remanufacturing (Bras and Rosen)
DMI9414715 - Enhancing Reusability by Design (Bras)
DMI9410005 - Integrated Product and De- and Remanufacture
Process Design (Bras) DMI9624787
54Kodak Funsaver Virtual Disassmbly
- Virtual disassembly allows tracking of basic
disassembly path based on user/designer
experience. - This path can be fine-tuned using other tools.
55IGRIP Robotic Disassembly Simulation