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Extrusion and Characterization of Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate (rPET) Filaments Compounded with Chain Extender and Impact Modifiers for Material-Extrusion Additive Manufacturing

Research Square (Research Square) 2023 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ola Rashwan, Ola Rashwan, Zachary Koroneos, Zachary Koroneos, Trent Townsend, Trent Townsend, Trent Townsend, Trent Townsend, Brennan Wodrig, Brennan Wodrig, Matthew Caputo, Kirk Cantor Kirk Cantor, Brennan Wodrig, Brennan Wodrig, Robert James Bylone, Robert James Bylone, Kirk Cantor, Matthew Caputo, Kirk Cantor

Summary

Researchers developed recycled PET plastic filaments with improved mechanical properties for use in 3D printing, by adding chain extenders and impact modifiers during processing. Converting plastic waste into 3D printing feedstock offers a pathway to upcycle PET bottles that would otherwise fragment into microplastics in the environment.

Polymers

Abstract The continuous growth of annual production and consumption of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is coined with increasing waste that leaks into the environment, landfills and oceans as microplastics and nano plastics fragments. Upcycling the recycled PET to make a feedstock for the fast-growing material-extrusion additive manufacturing (MEX-AM) technology can contribute to the solution and supports the concept of sustainable materials. In this work, extrudable filaments comprising recycled polyethylene terephthalate (rPET) with low-cost additives, such as a chain extender, toughening agent, reactive impact modifier, and non-reactive impact modifier, have been fabricated using the twin-screw extruder. The optimum extrusion process parameters for producing uniform filaments of different rPET compounded formulations have been identified. The compounded filaments are then printed into standard ASTM test specimens for thermal characterization and mechanical characterization, including glass transition and melting temperatures, crystallinity and crystallization temperature, tensile strength, tensile modulus, ductility, flexural strength, and Izod impact energy. Furthermore, the melt flow index for the filaments was measured. More significantly, the experimental data showed that compounding rPET with such additives in the reactive twin-screw extrusion process results in uniform filaments that display advantageous thermal and mechanical properties and can be used as a feedstock in the MEX-AM technology. This study suggests that compounding the recycled PET pellets with low-cost additives while extruding them into filaments for MEX-AM offers excellent potential to make high-value-added customized products from a sustainable polymer feedstock.

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