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Becky Kriger

Recycling Plastic - 0 views

  • PET  Polyethylene Terephthalate Two-liter beverage bottles, mouthwash bottles, boil-in-bag pouches. HDPE  High Density Polyethylene Milk jugs, trash bags, detergent bottles. PVC Polyvinyl Chloride Cooking oil bottles, packaging around meat. LDPE  Low Density Polyethylene Grocery bags, produce bags, food wrap, bread bags. PP  Polypropylene Yogurt containers, shampoo bottles, straws, margarine tubs, diapers. PS  Polystyrene  Hot beverage cups, take-home boxes, egg cartons, meat trays, cd cases. OTHER All other types of plastics or packaging made from more than one type of plastic.
  • Plastics are not the waste and energy culprits that some people think they are. Plastics are really very energy efficient. It takes 20-40 percent less energy to manufacture plastic grocery bags than paper ones. And, since plastics are lightweight and take up so little space, it is much more efficient to transport them. It takes seven trucks to deliver the same number of paper bags as can be carried in one truckload of plastic bags.
  • Is plastic trash choking the Earth with Styrofoam® cups and fast-food plates? Not really. That’s just another misconception. By weight, plastics make up about 11 percent of America’s municipal solid waste. In comparison, paper makes up about 35 percent.
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  • These methods recover some of the value from the plastic. Recycling recovers the raw material, which can then be used to make new plastic products. Incineration recovers the chemical energy, which can be used to produce steam and electricity. Landfilling plastics does neither of these things. The value of landfilled plastic is buried forever.
  • A recycling plant uses seven steps to turn plastic trash into recycled plastic:
  • 1. Inspection  Workers inspect the plastic trash for contaminants like rock and glass, and for plastics that the plant cannot recycle.  2. Chopping and Washing  The plastic is washed and chopped into flakes. 3. Flotation Tank  If mixed plastics are being recycled, they are sorted in a flotation tank, where some types of plastic sink and others float. 4. Drying  The plastic flakes are dried in a tumble dryer. 5. Melting  The dried flakes are fed into an extruder, where heat and pressure melt the plastic. Different types of plastics melt at different temperatures. 6. Filtering  The molten plastic is forced through a fine screen to remove any contaminants that slipped through the washing process. The molten plastic is then formed into strands. 7. Pelletizing  The strands are cooled in water, then chopped into uniform pellets. Manufacturing companies buy the plastic pellets from recyclers to make new products. Recycled plastics also can be made into flowerpots, lumber, and carpeting.  
  • Because plastics are made from fossil fuels, you can think of them as another form of stored energy. Pound for pound, plastics contain as much energy as petroleum or natural gas, and much more energy than other types of garbage. This makes plastic an ideal fuel for waste-to-energy plants.
  • So, should we burn plastics or recycle them? It depends. Sometimes it takes more energy to make a product from recycled plastics than it does to make it from all-new materials. If that’s the case, it makes more sense to burn the plastics at a waste-to-energy plant than to recycle them. Burning plastics can supply an abundant amount of energy, while reducing the cost of waste disposal and saving landfill space.  
  • A study by Canadian scientist Martin Hocking shows that making a paper cup uses as much petroleum or natural gas as a polystyrene cup. Plus, the paper cup uses wood pulp. The Canadian study said, “The paper cup consumes 12 times as much steam, 36 times as much electricity, and twice as much cooling water as the plastic cup.” And because the paper cup uses more raw materials and energy, it also costs 2.5 times more than the plastic cup.
  • scientists have figured out two ways to make plastics degrade: biodegradation and photodegradation.
  • Photodegradable plastics are a different matter. They use no organic additives. They are made with a special type of plastic that breaks down and becomes brittle in the presence of sunlight. Of course, that means photodegradable plastics do not break down when they are covered by leaves or snow, or when they are buried in a landfill. 
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NEET Chemistry MCQ QUESTION ANSWERS [ 100% Free Practice ] - 0 views

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