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Industrial optical sorting for marine plastic litter management

UWA Profiles and Research Repository (University of Western Australia) 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Amaia Mendoza, Galder Kortaberría, Daniel Carrero, Amparo Latorre, Oihane C. Basurko, Cristina Peña-Rodríguez

Summary

This study evaluated the technical feasibility of using industrial optical sorting systems to separate marine PET plastic litter for recycling, finding that separation efficiency for marine-conditioned PET bottles exceeded 85% and was comparable to post-consumer municipal PET waste. Sorting by chemical composition achieved higher separation rates than sorting by color, suggesting that existing municipal sorting infrastructure could process marine plastic litter without major modifications.

Polymers

• The technical feasibility of marine plastic litter optical sorting is demonstrated. • Separation efficiency of marine PET bottles is very high (more than 85 %). • Separation rate of marine PET by chemical composition is higher than by colour. The aim of this study is to evaluate the possibility of incorporating marine litter from the coast into the management system of the non-selectively collected fraction of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW). With this purpose, the technical feasibility of automatic separation of marine plastic litter is evaluated, which would allow for subsequent recycling. This solution requires mechanical–biological-treatment plants (MBT) to be able to sort marine plastic litter. Poly (ethylene terephthalate) (PET) bottles constitute one of the most commonly reported types of marine plastics. Considering the sorting methods employed in MBT plants, optical sorting tests were performed with marine PET litter and compared with those for post-consumer municipal PET waste, in order to assess whether the current technology implemented in these plants would allow their automatic sorting. Results show that the separation efficiency of PET degraded under marine conditions and outdoors is very high, and close to that of post-consumer municipal PET waste. The separation efficiency by transparent colour for different types of PET materials evaluated is also very effective and similar to that obtained for separation by chemical composition. Therefore, the chemical differences observed would not affect the efficiency of automatic sorting of marine origin PET in a waste treatment plant.

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