High Density Polyethylene (Hdpe)
High Density Polyethylene (Hdpe)
HDPE refers to a plastic used to make bottles for milk, juice, water and laundry products.
Unpigmented HDPE bottles are translucent and have good barrier properties and stiffness. They are
well suited to packaging products with short shelf lives such as milk. Pigmented HDPE bottles
generally have better stress crack and chemical resistance than bottles made with unpigmented HDPE.
These properties are needed for packaging such items as household chemicals and detergents, which
have a longer shelf life.
Made via a high pressure process at 3000 atm and 300 degrees.
Low relative density: 0.91 to 0.925 grams/cubic centimetres.
LDPE is a tough, semi-transparent material.
LDPE becomes pliable at around 60 to 80 degrees.
LDPE remains stable down to -60 degrees.
Good welding properties, weldable at 110 to 140 degrees.
Low permeability to aqueous vapour (steam).
High permeability to gases like oxygen.
POLYPROPYLENE (PP):
Polypropylene has excellent chemical resistance, is strong and has the lowest density of the plastics
used in packaging. It has a high melting point, making it ideal for hot-fill liquids. In film form it may or
may not be oriented (stretched). PP is found in everything from flexible and rigid packaging to fibres
and large molded parts for automotive and consumer products.
POLYSTYRENE (PS):
Polystyrene is a very versatile plastic that can be rigid or foamed. General purpose polystyrene is
clear, hard and brittle. It has a relatively low melting point. Typical applications include protective
packaging, containers, lids, cups, bottles, trays and tumblers.
PET Clear, tough solvent Soft drink and water Pillow and sleeping
butter containers
sheeting, bottles
PE-LD Soft, flexible, waxy Plastic Food wrap, Rubbish bin liners,
PP Hard but still flexible, Dip bottles and ice cream Pegs, bins, pipes,
waxy surface, softens tubs, potato chip bags, pallet sheets, oil
Polypropylene
at around 140°C, straws, microwave funnels, car battery
Affected by fats and brittle toys, video cases stationery trays and
solvents accessories
PS-E
fragile items
OTHER Includes all other resins Car parts, appliance Car parts, concrete
of plastics
Types of Plastics
Recycling Resources
Recycling Facts
Recycling Pictures
They are commonly called SPI codes, and the numbers within
the recycling arrows refer to different types of plastic resins.
chemicals.
PC-ABS Blend Good stability in case of high temperature combined with enormous
impact strength as well as toughness at subzero temperature. On the whole,
a negative effect.
Cases and operating elements of all kinds. Indoor use, also suitable
coating.
Polystyrene Normally brittle and resistant to fairly low temperature. SB-types are
avoided.
PMMA (plexiglass®
Cases and front panels for infrared transmitters and receivers as well
as transparent parts.
[edit]Cellulose-based plastics
Parkes developed a synthetic replacement
for ivory which he marketed under the trade
name Parkesine, and which won a bronze
medal at the 1862 World's fair in London.
Parkesine was made from cellulose (the
major component of plant cell walls) treated
with nitric acid and a solvent. The output of
the process (commonly known as cellulose
nitrate or pyroxilin) could be dissolved
in alcohol and hardened into a transparent
and elastic material that could be molded
when heated.[14] By incorporating pigments
into the product, it could be made to
resemble ivory.
Bois Durci is a plastic molding material
based on cellulose. It was patented in Paris
by Lepage in 1855. It is made from finely
ground wood flour mixed with a binder,
either egg or blood albumen, or gelatine.
The wood is probably either ebony or rose
wood, which gives a black or brown resin.
The mixture is dried and ground into a fine
powder. The powder is placed in a steel
mold and compressed in a
powerful hydraulic press while being heated
by steam. The final product has a highly
polished finish imparted by the surface of the
steel mold.
[edit]Bakelite
Main article: Bakelite
The first so called plastic based on a
synthetic polymer was made
from phenol and formaldehyde, with the first
viable and cheap synthesis methods
invented in 1907, by Leo Hendrik Baekeland,
a Belgian-born American living in New York
state. Baekeland was searching for an
insulating shellac to coat wires in electric
motors and generators. He found that
mixtures of phenol (C6H5OH) and
formaldehyde (HCOH) formed a sticky mass
when mixed together and heated, and the
mass became extremely hard if allowed to
cool. He continued his investigations and
found that the material could be mixed with
wood flour, asbestos, or slate dust to create
"composite" materials with different
properties. Most of these compositions were
strong and fire resistant. The only problem
was that the material tended to foam during
synthesis, and the resulting product was of
unacceptable quality.
Baekeland built pressure vessels to force out
the bubbles and provide a smooth, uniform
product. He publicly announced his
discovery in 1912, naming it bakelite. It was
originally used for electrical and mechanical
parts, finally coming into widespread use in
consumer goods in the 1920s. When the
Bakelite patent expired in 1930, the Catalin
Corporation acquired the patent and began
manufacturing Catalin plastic using a
different process that allowed a wider range
of coloring.
Bakelite was the first true plastic. It was a
purely synthetic material, not based on any
material or even molecule found in nature. It
was also the first thermosetting plastic.
Conventional thermoplastics can be molded
and then melted again, but thermoset
plastics form bonds between polymers
strands when cured, creating a tangled
matrix that cannot be undone without
destroying the plastic. Thermoset plastics
are tough and temperature resistant.
Bakelite was cheap, strong, and durable. It
was molded into thousands of forms, such
as cases for radios, telephones and clocks,
andbilliard balls.
Phenol-based ("Phenolic") plastics have
been largely replaced by cheaper and less
brittle plastics, but they are still used in
applications requiring their insulating and
heat-resistant properties. For example, some
electronic circuit boards are made of sheets
of paper or cloth impregnated with phenolic
resin.
[edit]Polystyrene and Polyvinyl Chloride
Main articles: Polystyrene and PVC
Plastic piping and firestops being installed in Ontario. Certain plastic pipes can
be used in some non-combustible buildings, provided they are firestopped
properly and that the flame spread ratings comply with the localbuilding code.
[edit]Oxo-biodegradable
Main article: Oxo Biodegradable
Oxo-biodegradable (OBD) plastic is
polyolefin plastic to which has been added
very small (catalytic) amounts of metal salts.
As long as the plastic has access to oxygen
(as in a littered state), these additives
catalyze the natural degradation process to
speed it up so that the OBD plastic will
degrade when subject to environmental
conditions. Once degraded to a small
enough particle they can interact with
biological processes to produce to water,
carbon dioxide and biomass. The process is
shortened from hundreds of years to months
for degradation and thereafter
biodegradation depends on the micro-
organisms in the environment. Typically this
process is not fast enough to meet ASTM
D6400 standards for definition as
compostable plastics.
[edit]Price, environment, and the future