Hygienic shields become high-quality recycling resources

A great number of hygienic shields, commonly known as sneeze guards, is being used in industrial and trade facilities, as well as in the catering trade and restaurant business.
Krall provides disposers and collecting points with a possibility to return used hygienic shields for infection protection (also known as sneeze guards), as well as corresponding production residues to a sustainable, environmentally friendly reuse saving both resources and costs. Photo: iStock.com/miodrag ignjatovic

Now the disposal of these highly transparent plates, which may consist of very different plastic material, is becoming an issue. Krall Kunststoff-Recycling has foresightedly prepared for a sustainable recycling. With a powerful infrastructure and state-of-the-art technology, today the company is able to accept random quantities and turn them into single origin regrinds that are highly demanded in the plastic industry. For waste disposal companies and collecting points, this is an environmentally friendly and financially attractive alternative to the thermal utilisation of these mixed plastic scraps.

Executive director Markus Krall explains: “The sneeze guard – omnipresent due to the pandemic – presently is still a rather dormant resource for plastic recycling. We expect an increasing amount of them to incur at the recycling centres and at the classical disposal companies acting as local collection points for rubbish and industrial waste. The different, but visually very similar plastic types cannot be distinguished there, so that the plates mostly are unsorted and then have to be disposed of as residual waste with costs. By contrast, there is our offer to accept these collected goods and to return them into the raw materials cycle. We accept all common box systems up to large containers, and beyond that even offer the possibility to unload walking-floor trucks.”

As the mechanical recycling is only possible with identical plastics, Krall then performs the task firstly to sort the materials separately according to fractions and only then to grind them. “With this step, the regrind becomes attractive for reuse, as only then it can be used for the production of high-quality plastic products again, be it injection of moulded parts or extrusion of plates and profiles”, says Krall.

The heterogeneity of the collected goods is due to the discrepancy between the sudden high demand for corresponding plates and the limited supply of raw materials respectively available at short term. Krall continues: “As we traditionally also dispose of the production residues of producers and processors, we know quite exactly what to expect. This will mainly be – up to about 70 % – polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), followed by about 10 % polycarbonate (PC) as well as small amounts of PET-A and PET-G, styrene-based thermoplastics like PS, SAN, or ASA, and PVC, too.
To guarantee that the finished regrind will be actually single-origin despite these unfavourable conditions, Krall made a future-oriented investment. The company is just starting up a new system especially configured for its demands to safely distinguish and separate even very similar plastic materials. This enables the recycler to offer regrinds with nearly virgin material processing quality. This exceeds by far the common sorting by colours, which the company keeps on doing as a standard feature and also offers as a service.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.