Recovery material from a new designed surgical face mask: A complementary approach based on mechanical and thermo-chemical recycling

J Environ Manage. 2022 Dec 15:324:116341. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.116341. Epub 2022 Sep 30.

Abstract

The usage of disposable face mask to control the spread of COVID-19 disease has led to the alarming generation of a huge amount of plastic waste in a short span of time. On other hand, face masks are made of high-quality thermoplastic polymers that could be recovered and converted into valuable products. The aim of this study is to investigate a complementary approach for the recycling of face mask in lab-scale plants: the mechanical recycling of the filter in polypropylene (PP) and the chemical recycling of the whole face mask. For this purpose, a new designed surgical face mask was chemically and physically characterized. The results shows that the face mask was composed of 92.3 wt% high grade PP (filter), very similar to virgin PP but with a high melt volume index (MVI, 385 cm3/10 min) due to its non-woven manufacturing. The PP from face mask was mixed with recycled virgin PP in order to obtain a MVI suitable for the extrusion process and recycled as filament for 3D printing. This filament was used to print a specimen with a very similar visual quality of that printed with a commercial PP filament. Simultaneously, the whole face mask underwent a pyrolysis process to produce new feedstocks or fuels. Low-cost catalysts derived from coal fly ash (CFA) were employed to enhance the production of light hydrocarbons. In particular, the synthetized acid X zeolite (HX/CFA) improved the yield of light fractions up to 91 wt% (79 wt% for thermal pyrolysis) and the quality of the light oil with the 85% of C6-C10 (55% for thermal pyrolysis). Furthermore, HX/CFA decreased the degradation temperature of PP to 384 °C versus 458 °C of thermal cracking.

Keywords: Filaments for 3D printing; Low-cost catalyst; Oil; Polypropylene; Surgical face masks; Thermo-chemical recycling.

MeSH terms

  • COVID-19*
  • Humans
  • Masks*
  • Plastics
  • Polypropylenes
  • Pyrolysis
  • Recycling

Substances

  • Plastics
  • Polypropylenes