Search History
Clear History
{{item.search_key}}
Hot Searches
Change
{{item.name}}
{{item.english_name}}
Subscribe eNews
Once A Week Once Every Two Weeks
{{sum}}
Login Register

Applications

EREMA to show high-quality recycling solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026

ENGEL’s high-performance automotive solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026

ST BlowMoulding to unveil multiple innovative hollow moulding solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026

Products

Chambroad to highlight specialization and innovation at CHINAPLAS 2026

Evonik displays its latest solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026

Kistler’s cavity pressure sensor for injection molding trainings

Activities

  • CHINAPLAS 2026:VDMA “The Power of Plastics” forum highlights digitalization and circularity

  • Must-attend: CHINAPLAS x CPRJ Plastics Recycling and Circular Economy Conference in Shanghai

  • Beyond procurement: Exploring the concurrent events at CHINAPLAS 2026

Pictorial

News Videos

Ready for CHINAPLAS 2026? Two tools for your visit

Interview: Ada Leung, General Manager, Adsale Exhibition Services Ltd.

KUMHO-SUNNY: Your selection logic is already outdated!

Conference Videos

[Mandarin session: Highlights] Covestro: Innovative thermal conductive material solution for new-generation network devices

[Mandarin session: Highlights] Covestro: The Material Effect: Empowering Innovations in Solar-Storage-Charging Smart Energy and Data Center Applications

[Mandarin session: Highlights] Covestro: In-mold Coating (DC/IMC) Technology - Facilitating Personalized Design for Automotive Interior and Exterior Components

Corporate/Product Videos

About Dow

B Series brush machine

Innovative PVC Compounds for Global Manufacturing | Visit Us Booth 6.2A 39 at CHINAPLAS

Home > News > Recycling

New solvent makes recycling virgin-standard PP from carpet waste possible

Source:Adsale Plastics Network Date :2021-06-03 Editor :JK

A significant part of carpet waste consists of petroleum-based polypropylene. As a non-recyclable product, disposing of it has previously meant incineration or landfill. However, a new solvent is now making it possible to recover virgin-standard polypropylene from carpet waste with no perceptible reduction in quality.

 

Developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBP and its partners, the process also involves cost competitiveness. The development has taken place as part of the ISOPREP EU project.

 

“For the first time, this is making it possible to recover polypropylene from carpet waste - and the outcome is virgin-quality,” said Maike Illner, a researcher at Fraunhofer IBP.

 

Not only does this allow the recovered polypropylene to be used in lower-quality products (in a process known as downcycling), but it also means that the quality is similar to that of newly manufactured polypropylene, also making the material suitable for high-quality products.


1_web.jpg

Broken-down carpet waste that is subsequently cleaned and has ionic liquid added to it.


The process is based on a special solvent in the form of an ionic liquid. With the right components, it is able to selectively extract polypropylene from carpet fibers. Before the team of experts applies the solvent, the carpet waste is cleaned - something which involves removing as much of the backing as possible - and broken down.

 

Once the pretreatment is complete, the waste is fed into a reactor in which it undergoes treatment using the solvent. The polypropylene is selectively dissolved in the solvent, a method that provides an effective way of removing dyes and other additives.

 

The process is already being used on an extensive laboratory scale involving several liters of the solvent. Now, the research consortium has set its sights on scaling the process up to a pilot plant with the ability to recycle a ton of carpet waste per day. The pilot plant is set to commence operation by the end of the project in March 2022.


2_web.jpg

Ultra-pure polypropylene from the ISOPREP process.


A recycling process can only be deployed on a large scale if its costs are competitive. For this application, this means retaining as much of the expensive ionic liquid as possible in the cycle.

 

“If loss rates can be kept to one percent or less, there is potential for the costs of the process to rival those of producing new polypropylene,” continued Illner. “We know this thanks to a preliminary economic analysis that we conducted at Fraunhofer IBP.”

 

The analysis involved the Fraunhofer researchers investigating the quantities of material and energy that would be required for the process and what kind of product would be output, and then calculating the associated costs. The team also considered how the costs would develop over the long term.

 

Fraunhofer IBP is focusing on the ecological aspects of carpet recycling. It is able to draw conclusions from factors including a lifecycle assessment, which sheds light on the emissions that are produced during the recycling process, for example. If the consortium is able to achieve its aim of keeping solvent loss rates to one percent or less in this case too, primary energy requirements and greenhouse gas emissions will remain on a similar scale to those involved in producing new polypropylene.

 

While carpet waste is the focus of this particular project, the process that has been developed has potential applications far beyond it. The experts involved believe that it could be transferred to a whole host of waste flows that contain polypropylene and are unsuitable for conventional recycling methods.

 

“One example is polypropylene products that contain dyes and additives,” says Illner. “Until now, it has been difficult to extract them from plastic, which means that the recycled polypropylene has only been suitable for use in lower-quality products.” The new process separates the polypropylene not only from other materials, but also from dyes and other additives, allowing it to be used in high-quality applications.

 

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program.

 Like 丨  {{details_info.likes_count}}
Recycling
 SACMI (SHANGHAI) MACHINERY EQUIPMENT CO., LTD.      
 DONGGUAN DEHUA PRECISION MOLD CO., LTD      
 ZHANGJIAGANG XINRONG MACHINERY CO.,LTD      
 JUHESHUN ADVANCED MATERIALS CO., LTD.      
 HEFEI TAIHE INTELLIGENT TECHNOLOGY GROUP CO.,LTD.      
 BEIJING ENERGY ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES CO.,LTD.      
 WINDORA MATERIALS LLC      
 GREENWICH (CHINA) TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT LIMITED      
 GREENCORE RESOURCES LIMITED      
 LINKER NEW MATERIALS CO., LTD      
 Coperion GmbH      
 SHANGHAI HAWKWAY PROCESS SOLUTIONS CO., LTD      
 GUANGXI HENGYI NEW MATERIALS CO., LTD.      
 TAIZHOU MIXIN MACHINERY CO., LTD.      
 ZHEJIANG ROTOUN PLASTIC TECHNOLOGY CORP.      
 GUANGDONG GUOHENG YOUHE ADVANCED MATERIALS CO., LTD.      
 KADIDE      
 GUANGXI WUZHOU GUOLONG RECYCLABE RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT CO., LTD.      
 SUZHOU BECHTON PLASTIC MACHINERY CO., LTD      
 YUYAO KAWAGUCHI Manufacturing Co., Ltd.      
 LINYI HUASU ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD.      
 GUANGDONG ENMEI CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD      
 ANHUI ZHONGXIN HONGWEI TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD      
 FUJIAN NAN'AN STAR RUBBER&PLASTIC MACHINERY CO., LTD.      
 ZHANGJIAGANG GREENLANDPLAST MACHINERY CO.,LTD      
 FUJIAN YANGZHU NEW MATERIAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD      
 HUBEI XINJIANSHI MACHINERY TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD      
 HEBEI GELIA PLASTIC MACHINERY SALES COMPANY      
 FOSHAN SHUNDE MINGSANFENG MOULD CO., LTD.      

The content you're trying to view is for members only. If you are currently a member, Please login to access this content.   Login

Source:Adsale Plastics Network Date :2021-06-03 Editor :JK

A significant part of carpet waste consists of petroleum-based polypropylene. As a non-recyclable product, disposing of it has previously meant incineration or landfill. However, a new solvent is now making it possible to recover virgin-standard polypropylene from carpet waste with no perceptible reduction in quality.

 

Developed by the Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBP and its partners, the process also involves cost competitiveness. The development has taken place as part of the ISOPREP EU project.

 

“For the first time, this is making it possible to recover polypropylene from carpet waste - and the outcome is virgin-quality,” said Maike Illner, a researcher at Fraunhofer IBP.

 

Not only does this allow the recovered polypropylene to be used in lower-quality products (in a process known as downcycling), but it also means that the quality is similar to that of newly manufactured polypropylene, also making the material suitable for high-quality products.


1_web.jpg

Broken-down carpet waste that is subsequently cleaned and has ionic liquid added to it.


The process is based on a special solvent in the form of an ionic liquid. With the right components, it is able to selectively extract polypropylene from carpet fibers. Before the team of experts applies the solvent, the carpet waste is cleaned - something which involves removing as much of the backing as possible - and broken down.

 

Once the pretreatment is complete, the waste is fed into a reactor in which it undergoes treatment using the solvent. The polypropylene is selectively dissolved in the solvent, a method that provides an effective way of removing dyes and other additives.

 

The process is already being used on an extensive laboratory scale involving several liters of the solvent. Now, the research consortium has set its sights on scaling the process up to a pilot plant with the ability to recycle a ton of carpet waste per day. The pilot plant is set to commence operation by the end of the project in March 2022.


2_web.jpg

Ultra-pure polypropylene from the ISOPREP process.


A recycling process can only be deployed on a large scale if its costs are competitive. For this application, this means retaining as much of the expensive ionic liquid as possible in the cycle.

 

“If loss rates can be kept to one percent or less, there is potential for the costs of the process to rival those of producing new polypropylene,” continued Illner. “We know this thanks to a preliminary economic analysis that we conducted at Fraunhofer IBP.”

 

The analysis involved the Fraunhofer researchers investigating the quantities of material and energy that would be required for the process and what kind of product would be output, and then calculating the associated costs. The team also considered how the costs would develop over the long term.

 

Fraunhofer IBP is focusing on the ecological aspects of carpet recycling. It is able to draw conclusions from factors including a lifecycle assessment, which sheds light on the emissions that are produced during the recycling process, for example. If the consortium is able to achieve its aim of keeping solvent loss rates to one percent or less in this case too, primary energy requirements and greenhouse gas emissions will remain on a similar scale to those involved in producing new polypropylene.

 

While carpet waste is the focus of this particular project, the process that has been developed has potential applications far beyond it. The experts involved believe that it could be transferred to a whole host of waste flows that contain polypropylene and are unsuitable for conventional recycling methods.

 

“One example is polypropylene products that contain dyes and additives,” says Illner. “Until now, it has been difficult to extract them from plastic, which means that the recycled polypropylene has only been suitable for use in lower-quality products.” The new process separates the polypropylene not only from other materials, but also from dyes and other additives, allowing it to be used in high-quality applications.

 

This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program.

全文内容需要订阅后才能阅读哦~
立即订阅

Recommended Articles

Recycling
EREMA to show high-quality recycling solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026
 2026-04-14
Recycling
ST BlowMoulding to unveil multiple innovative hollow moulding solutions at CHINAPLAS 2026
 2026-04-13
Recycling
Recycling production waste from diaper manufacturing
 2026-04-08
Recycling
Report: Unraveling the secrets to a thriving plastic recycling sector
 2026-04-04
Recycling
Röhm invests in chemical recycling
 2026-04-02
Recycling
Japanese plastics market accelerates green material transformation
 2026-03-26

You May Be Interested In

Change

  • People
  • Company
loading... No Content
{{[item.truename,item.truename_english][lang]}} {{[item.company_name,item.company_name_english][lang]}} {{[item.job_name,item.name_english][lang]}}
{{[item.company_name,item.company_name_english][lang]}} Company Name    {{[item.display_name,item.display_name_english][lang]}}  

Polyurethane Investment Medical Carbon neutral Reduce cost and increase efficiency CHINAPLAS Financial reports rPET INEOS Styrolution Evonik Borouge Polystyrene (PS) mono-material Sustainability Circular economy BASF SABIC Multi-component injection molding machine All-electric injection molding machine Thermoforming machine

New solvent makes recycling virgin-standard PP from carpet waste possible

识别右侧二维码,进入阅读全文
下载
x 关闭
订阅
亲爱的用户,请填写一下信息
I have read and agree to the 《Terms of Use》 and 《Privacy Policy》
立即订阅
Top
Feedback
Chat
News
Market News
Applications
Products
Video
In Pictures
Specials
Activities
eBook
Front Line
Plastics Applications
Chemicals and Raw Material
Processing Technologies
Products
Injection
Extrusion
Auxiliary
Blow Molding
Mold
Hot Runner
Screw
Applications
Packaging
Automotive
Medical
Recycling
E&E
LED
Construction
Others
Events
Conference
Webinar
CHINAPLAS
CPS+ eMarketplace
Official Publications
CPS eNews
Media Kit
Social Media
Facebook
Linkedin