0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Strategic selection tool for thermoplastic materials in a renewable circular economy: Identifying future circular polymers

Sustainable Production and Consumption 2023 14 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Evelien Maaskant, Wouter Post, M.T. Brouwer, M.T. Brouwer, Daan S. van Es, E.U. Thoden van Velzen

Summary

Researchers developed a strategic material selection tool to guide the transition toward a renewable circular economy for thermoplastics, helping identify which polymers can meet performance requirements while being decoupled from fossil feedstocks and compatible with biodegradation or closed-loop recycling.

Polymers

To progress towards a renewable circular economy for thermoplastic materials it is imperative to decouple from fossil feedstocks, to maximise looping strategies and to manufacture occasionally littered articles from readily biodegradable materials. This transition is complex due to the combination of stringent technical specifications that are required for ordinary plastic products and the demands that all end-of-life scenarios foist on these products. The presented strategic material selection tool for fast moving consumer goods in a renewable circular economy prioritises their suitability for the expected end-of-life fates and the contrived technical performance. This framework is tested for 17 common consumer articles and 21 biobased plastics. The strategic selection tool shows that consumer articles that are made from foamed and fibrous plastics, such as matrasses and textiles, can potentially be produced from biobased alternatives, such as biobased poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET), poly(trimethylene terephthalate) (PTT), poly(butylene succinate) (PBS), poly(butylene succinate-co-adipate) (PBSA) and poly(butylene adipate-co-terephthalate) (PBAT). On the other hand, the tool also reveals that there are currently no adequate alternatives in barrier (food) packages and in elastomeric products such as tyres, soles of footwear and gloves. Biobased PET is a good polymer for beverage bottles provided that the leakage to the natural environment is minimised with an effective collection, reuse and recycling system. Although there are no viable single-biobased-polymeric alternatives for flexible packages to pack for instance dried foods, solutions could be developed in the form of multi-layered films of various biobased and biodegradable materials. But it would also imply that a dedicated new recycling technology needs to be developed for such multilayer films. The presented tool demonstrates that the technology is ready to start the transition towards a renewable circular economy for consumer articles such as matrasses, cushions, beverage bottles. Simultaneously, new biobased polymeric solutions need to be developed for multiple other applications such as tyres, footwear, gloves and flexible barrier packaging.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Socio-economic Importance of Biomaterials in the Transition to the Circular Economy Model

Researchers examined the socio-economic role of biomaterials in transitioning economies toward the circular economy model, finding that substituting conventional plastics with bio-based materials can reduce waste accumulation while meeting EU sustainable development targets for 2030.

Article Tier 2

Bio-based plastics in a circular economy: A review of recovery pathways and implications for product design

Researchers reviewed how bio-based plastics — made from renewable plant sources — can be recovered and recycled at end-of-life, finding that the feasibility of eight different recovery methods depends heavily not just on plastic chemistry but on how products are designed, and offering guidance for designers to improve recyclability.

Article Tier 2

A Review of Bioplastics and Their Adoption in the Circular Economy

This review examines the current landscape of bioplastics, including bio-based and biodegradable materials, as potential alternatives to conventional fossil-fuel-derived plastics. Researchers assessed standards, life cycle analyses, and environmental performance of various bioplastic types. The study highlights that while bioplastics offer potential benefits for reducing fossil resource dependency, challenges remain around their actual environmental performance and integration into circular economy systems.

Article Tier 2

Are Reliable and Emerging Technologies Available for Plastic Recycling in a Circular Economy?

This review examines the current landscape of plastic recycling technologies -- including mechanical, thermal, chemical, and biological depolymerization methods such as pyrolysis -- evaluating their readiness for circular economy integration. It concludes that while recycling rates remain below 10% globally, emerging technologies offer pathways toward closed-loop plastic supply chains, though full-scale implementation requires further development and performance assessment.

Article Tier 2

Towards a Circular Economy of Plastics: An Evaluation of the Systematic Transition to a New Generation of Bioplastics

This review evaluates the transition from petroleum-based plastics to bioplastics within a circular economy framework, assessing the sustainability, production challenges, and environmental trade-offs of current bioplastic alternatives.

Share this paper