AMT DEC 2021

Page 100

098

WASTE & RECYCLING

Improving plastic recycling with hyperspectral imaging Plastic waste has become one of Australia’s greatest environmental concerns. Recycling discarded materials is a critical challenge, and one in which the implementation of hyperspectral imaging technology offers benefits. Unfortunately, our use of plastic products is one of ‘make, take, and throw’, without thinking of its long-lasting impact on the environment. A recent CSIRO report, Advanced recycling technologies to address Australia’s plastic waste, showed human consumption of plastic over the period of 2016-17 reached some 3.4m tonnes. However, the following year, Australia managed to recycle less than 10% of all this waste! Reducing plastic waste is critical to our environment and our economy. Australia can no longer export waste to China, so we must find ways to deal effectively with it ourselves. Today, only half of our end-of-life plastics are recycled – some is compressed to go into landfill, taking decades to breakdown while exuding dangerous gases; some is incinerated; polluting the air; while other waste finds its way into the ocean with devastating consequences on bird and marine life. However, there is a way to rectify this by building a circular economy through effective plastic recycling processes. Due to plastic’s flexible usage, not all discarded plastic is the same, with differing chemical structures used to make different products. Plastic drink bottles are made from polyethylene terephthalate (PET); pipes made from polyvinyl chloride (PVC) are installed in plumbing applications around our homes; while low-density polyethylene (LDPE) is used in consumable products such as plastic bags, food packaging and coffee cups. Discarded plastics received at garbage centres are generally transported as mixed loads to mechanical recycling plants, where sorting process removes other waste. However, this process can be greatly improved with the implementation of hyperspectral imaging technology. Hyperspectral imaging cameras are used across Europe to improve identification of plastics in mixed garbage. The camera can capture both the spatial and spectral images of each item, making separation easier. Due to their chemical structure, all plastic types have unique spectral properties that cannot be identified by an RGB camera or human eye. Commonly used plastics have unique spectral properties, but due to their similar chemical structures, the spectral differences are small, sp high spectral resolution is required. Using spatial resolution, a HySpex camera can separate even small plastic pieces passing along a conveyor belt at high speed. The spectral differences identified during data analysis provides the basis for a robust classification model that can be used with every mechanical sort. Originally developed for defence purposes by NEO in Norway, HySpex cameras are being applied in such diverse tasks as identifying ore patterns in mining sites, or finding nematodes in fish fillets. Governments are recognising the need for innovative technology in this area, with recently released grant funding encouraging recyclers to find new ways to capture the value of our plastic waste and build a circular economy through effective recycling. A circular economy is one where plastic waste must be recycled into new products. The Australian Packaging Covenant has set targets for a true circular economy to be reached by 2025. To reach a true circular economy requires adopting technical innovation to improve current practices of mechanical recycling, and even to adopt advanced recycling techniques. Both of these recycling processes have a part to play. The most common form of recycling in Australia is mechanical recycling, where plastic is separated from other garbage, then chopped, washed, and melted into granulates for extrusion into new plastic products.

AMT DEC 2021

But more than that can be achieved where gains are measured in real economic value. An amazing example of innovation can be found in NSW, where one company is taking broken down plastic waste and using an environmentally friendly process to convert it into bio-crude oil. Advanced recycling such as that being used by the processing plant in NSW, recovers the chemical building blocks that make up the plastic product. When we think of plastic waste, we usually think of plastic bottles. But polymers are used in many other things, such as clothing, carpets, packaging, toys or car seats. These are all amenable to recycling. This is where advanced or chemical recycling works in partnership with mechanical recycling, as it can handle problematic items that have for many years gone into landfill, leaving plastics to contaminate the environment for decades. Introducing innovation to improve current garbage sorting systems is the first step to better processing. Indeed, mechanical recycling is more effective when the waste is sorted into plastic that is suitable for mechanical processing, and those that require separation for advanced processing. In Europe, according to a 2020 study, mechanical recycling was used to process more than 5m tonnes of waste. Now HySpex hyperspectral imaging cameras are offering innovation to the process of separating plastic types, providing the building blocks of a circular economy. Sorting plastic waste is problematic, not just for households, but for waste recycling companies dealing with mixed plastic waste. Hyperspectral cameras offer an innovative solution for recycling companies in sorting plastic waste that might be used more effectively to the benefit of both our environmental health and the economy. HySpex hyperspectral imaging cameras support plastic recycling processes with high-quality, customised, industrial-scale turnkey solutions. www.raymax.com.au


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MANUFACTURING HISTORY: A look back in time

4min
pages 120-122

AMTIL FORUMS

17min
pages 108-111

Lockheed Martin partners with Omni Tanker

4min
page 106

Integra Systems – What is Circularity by Design?

3min
page 102

Foamex: Recycling polystyrene & closing the loop

2min
page 103

A smarter way of dealing with plastic

4min
pages 104-105

Recycling pioneer named NSW Australian of the Year

4min
page 101

Autowell – Vices for any machining setting

2min
page 99

Improving plastic recycling with hyperspectral imaging

4min
page 100

Haubex: Lang Technik’s latest innovation

3min
page 98

Sharp Tooling commissions large Okuma machine

2min
page 97

TAFE NSW gets tooled up with Suhner

3min
page 96

AM case study: AGCOM

5min
pages 92-93

COMPANY FOCUS: Agerris – Pioneers in their field

7min
pages 94-95

Meeting the need for extremely dry compressed air

7min
pages 90-91

Strong growth for food, grocery manufacturing

3min
page 89

ONE ON ONE: Dr Mirjana Prica

15min
pages 84-87

The impact of alignment on steel turning processes

5min
pages 82-83

Upton Engineering – Performance through precision

17min
pages 76-81

Metals leader partners with ipLaser

15min
pages 72-75

Tool for safer human-robot collaboration

4min
page 68

Perfume robots

4min
page 69

Press brakes – Why you need a seven-axis machine

6min
pages 70-71

Lorch – Bringing cobot welding to ANZ

5min
pages 66-67

Forklift safety: Is hi-vis the best we can offer?

6min
pages 64-65

Hangsterfer’s: A racing finish

6min
pages 62-63

Where can F1 in Schools take students?

14min
pages 58-61

EVOS: EV charging, made in Brisbane

4min
pages 56-57

What can we learn from the great chip famine?

5min
pages 52-53

Simulation speeds rollcage design process

7min
pages 50-51

How 3D printing makes McLaren go faster

8min
pages 54-55

Aussie aftermarket sector steams ahead

11min
pages 44-49

From the CEO

4min
pages 12-13

VOICEBOX: Opinions from the manufacturing industry

27min
pages 30-35

PRODUCT NEWS: Selection of new products

22min
pages 36-43

INDUSTRY NEWS: Current news from the Industry

27min
pages 20-29

From the Ministry

4min
pages 14-15

Advances in CNC tech fuel need for digitised tools 7

2min
pages 8-9

From the Industry

4min
pages 16-17

From the Union

4min
pages 18-19
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